CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
[0001] This application claims priority to App. Ser. No.
62/023,352, entitled "Improved Devices, Systems & Methods For Quickly Detecting Bilateral Differentials
In Olfactory Threshold, Presenting A Cascading Plurality Of Pure Aromas", filed July
11, 2014, and to App. Ser. No.
62/108,239, entitled "Method For Screening Bilateral Differentials In Olfactory Aroma Detection
And Confirming Alzheimer's Disease Through Retinal Plaque Deposits", filed January
27, 2015, the entire contents of each of which are hereby incorporated by reference.
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
[0002] The present invention generally relates to devices, systems and methods for determining
relative bilateral olfactory detection thresholds. More specifically, the present
invention relates to devices, systems and methods for detecting an asymmetrical differential
in a patient's olfactory detection threshold as measured at the left and right nostrils
and that, when present, a significant asymmetrical differential may indicate olfactory
deterioration and may, therefore, be used as a screening tool for Alzheimer's disease.
DESCRIPTION OF THE RELATED ART
[0003] Aroma testing in the past has been generally related to the overall aroma detection
of a person, commonly by naming a particular odor, without particular interest in
comparing the relative smelling ability of their nostrils or the type of aromas they
could and could not smell. Published articles document that a relatively poor sense
of smell in the left nostril, or sensitivity, as compared to the sensitivity of the
right nostril may be indicative of early brain damage due to neurological disease.
See, e.g.,
Murphy, et al., "Left hippocampal volume loss in Alzheimer's disease is reflected
in performance on odor identification: A structural MRI Study", Journal of the International
Neuropsychological Society, Vol. 9, No. 3, pp 459-471 (2003). This is the case in Alzheimer's Disease (hereinafter AD), but is of clinical significance
in the early detection of AD, however, only if the aroma used in the test is a pure
aroma for reasons that are discussed further
infra.
[0004] It is estimated that up to 40% of the elderly have undiagnosed early on-set Alzheimer's
disease, but have not been diagnosed as their dementia is quite mild at this point.
Under these circumstances, an early diagnostic tool, e.g., before clinically detectable
dementia is observed or diagnosed, is critical to enable therapies to be initiated
to slow, or perhaps even reverse, the progression of the disease.
[0005] Improved diagnostic screening methods useful in living people include: various blood
tests, many seeking to identify specific lipids seen only in advanced AD patient's
blood. Aroma detection screens, genetic markets for AD, radiological procedures, written
cognitive tests on paper or on computer devices have all been improved with varying
levels of efficacy. Amyloid Plaque deposit detection in eye tissue and other screening
methods, seek to detect telltale precursors of AD before significant damage is done
to the brain.
[0006] Another screening methodology takes advantage of the notable deficit of smelling
ability in the left nostril as compared to the smelling ability of the right nostril
to detect a pure aroma, appears according to previous medical research, to be indicative
of early neurological degeneration of the olfactory nerve, specifically as seen in
the early onset of AD.
[0007] The olfactory nerve is found on the left side of the brain and is not reversed bilaterally
as many brain functions are, such as eye sight. Research, including data from autopsies,
indicates that degeneration of the olfactory nerve occurs gradually and begins very
early in the disease development of AD. Such deterioration may begin years before
substantial dementia becomes notable. Thus currently a diagnosis of AD becomes confirmed
by existing testing procedures that are generally focused on observation, detection
and/or diagnosis of actual dementia. This is problematic in the detection of AD because,
inter alia, dementia presents in other non-AD diseases, conditions and/or disorders. Moreover,
at such late disease stages, AD is generally not amenable to treatment. Consequently,
screening and diagnosis at the earliest stage possible is critical.
[0008] The "pure odorant detection threshold" is the point at which an increasing concentration
of pure odorant molecules saturate the olfactory nerve to the extent that a cognitive
reaction first takes place, where the patient recognizes they are smelling something,
but haven't yet cognitively been able to identify the odor by name. There is a latent
period between introduction of the pure odorant molecules into the patient's nostrils
and when the pure odorant detection threshold is reached. Measurement of this latent
period can be of clinical utility. In the case of early onset AD, the latency in the
left nostril may be greater than that of the right nostril, providing very early clinical
indication of the presence of AD. The olfactory function differential favoring the
right side disappears in well advanced AD, as the entire brain deteriorates the right
side catches up in deterioration so that both sides are profoundly impacted.
[0009] The "pure odorant identification threshold" represents a slightly longer latent period
than the "pure odorant detection threshold" as it is the point at which the patient
is able to cognitively process the odor and then actually identify the odorant by
name.
[0010] A general process for measuring the left nostril latent period and related bilaterally
asymmetrical olfactory nerve deterioration is recently described in the "peanut butter
aroma test" reported by Jennifer Stamps at the University of Florida. The Stamps method
uses a simple but effective protocol where a common centimeter ruler is held up to
the nose of the test subject. The subject is instructed to close their eyes and cover
one nostril as a spoonful of peanut butter, a pure odorant as defined
infra, is slowly moved towards their nose. The clinical technician notes the estimated distance
in centimeters between the aroma source and the nostril of the test subject at the
point the first aroma detection threshold is noted by the subject. Two testing events
might result in the following exemplary pure odorant olfactory threshold values: 12
centimeters on the left nostril and 21 centimeters on the right nostril.
[0011] Both the left and right nostrils were tested several times under the Stamps methodology
and in random order with a 90-second "reset period" between trials to clear the olfactory
gland of the odorant. The relative smelling ability of the two nostrils were then
compared using known statistical techniques. Effectively, the Stamps method amounts
to an indirect measurement of concentration required for cognitive notice of peanut
butter aroma presented to a nostril, based upon reducing the distance between the
aroma source and the nostril. Stamps uses a single pure odorant with an endpoint identified
as the distance from aroma source to the nostril at the transition point where no
scent is detected to a scent cognitively noticed. Stamps, therefore, uses the "pure
odorant identification threshold" as an endpoint.
[0012] "Pure odorant", also referred to equivalently as "pure aroma" or "aroma" herein,
is defined as substances including molecules and/or compounds which principally stimulate
the olfactory cell receptors associated with the first cranial nerve and that do not
trigger or excite the trigeminal nerve associated with the fifth cranial nerve.
[0013] Thus, the use of a "pure odorant" for aroma testing is critical in the context of,
inter alia, detection of relative deterioration of smelling sensitivity in the left nostril compared
with the right nostril.
[0014] However, the Stamps method presents some obvious issues rendering it generally unacceptable
for repeatable and robust clinical results. Namely, Stamps fails to consider patients'
nasal structural issues which may contribute to low airflow and may contribute to
poor threshold detection ability in a given nostril. In addition, Stamps fails to
consider the general airflow within the testing environment and how that may impact
the test results. It is clear that commercialization of the methodology requires a
well-defined clinical protocol and more accurate and robust devices and testing methods.
Stamps also requires an at least 90 second reset period between screening events to
allow the subject to prepare for the next aroma presentation. This "reset" period
wastes valuable time and variations from person-to-person may require longer than
the prescribed 90 second period. Stamps also fails to use the "pure odorant detection
threshold", opting instead for the later-in-time "pure odorant identification threshold".
Finally, Stamps fails to recognize the advantage of "olfactory sensory dissonance"
defined as a phenomenon whereby an aroma having been noticed by a subject, that declines
in perceptive concentration as it is replaced by an increasing concentration of a
second aroma tends to crisply shift full cognitive notice to the second aroma and
the first aroma is then quickly forgotten.
[0015] Nonetheless, the Stamps test and other related previously published research papers
support the conclusion that an inability to detect a single pure aroma or odorant
relatively equally in both nostrils, especially when the deficit is more notable in
the left nostril, may indicate olfactory nerve damage and, therefore, indirectly the
early onset of AD.
[0016] Applicant has developed several solutions to the problem of bilateral screening as
further described in
US Patent Application 14/282622, entitled DEVICES, SYSTEMS AND METHODS FOR DETECTING A BILATERAL DIFFERENTIAL IN
OLFACTORY THRESHOLD FOR PURE ODORANTS, the entire contents of which are hereby incorporated
by reference.
[0017] A chain of scientifically based facts are behind aroma detection screening to detect
damage to the olfactory nerve, also referred to as the first cranial nerve:
- 1. There are a number of "pure odorants" that can only be detected by the olfactory
nerve and not the trigeminal system.
- 2. Autopsy results indicate that the earliest indications of AD occur near the olfactory
nerve on the left side of the brain.
- 3. The olfactory nerve is anatomically located behind the left nostril.
- 4. The loss of the sense of smell for pure aromas occurs first on the left side of
the brain proximate the olfactory nerve in the AD development process.
- 5. The right nostril can act as a control to find a relative strength of the nostrils
as a ratio.
- 6. An increasing concentration of pure aroma triggers a cognitive notice most people
are aware of and can cognitively react to.
- 7. Due to the phenomenon of olfactory sensory dissonance an aroma having been noticed
by a subject, that declines in apparent concentration as it is replaced by an increasing
concentration of a second aroma that tends to crisply shift full cognitive notice
to the second aroma and the first aroma is then quickly forgotten.
[0018] Bilateral aroma testing may, but need not, include comparison using a known absolute
concentration of aroma for scientific validation. Instead, a preferred embodiment
may comprise a relative comparison, in finding which nostril is sensitivity is greater
or weaker. Some variation is normal, but a profound difference is likely significant
baring identifiable medical reasons for the loss of symmetrical sensitivity.
[0019] Thus, the "relative sensitivity" of the two nostrils is a preferred variable being
sought for olfactory damage assessment, rather than "absolute sensitivity" using embodiments
of the present invention.
[0020] Some people have been exposed to industrial chemicals or paints that have damaged
their sense of smell. However such chemicals likely impacted both nostrils relatively
equally since such damaging chemical exposure was equal. In addition, research indicates
that a relative equal loss of the sense of smell for pure aromas on both sides, as
compared to a normal detection level, might be indicative of other neurological diseases,
such as Parkinson's disease which impacts both nostrils equally.
[0021] Surgery or a serious brain infection or serious head trauma for example, might render
one nostril's sensitivity damaged or completely unable to function without presenting
an accurate indication of AD linked olfactory damage. Some people are genetically
handicapped in their sense of smell for pure aromas lacking any known trauma.
[0022] A deviated septum might reduce air flow on the affected side which might skew results
slightly in favor of the non-impacted nostril. Actual field testing data indicate
that the effect of a restricted airway is not as much an issue as anticipated, but
the condition still needs to be considered. Congestion and other reasons for temporary
odor sensitivity impaction need to be eliminated or considered as a disqualification
for the aroma screen in severe cases. An alternative AD screen should then be used,
such as the cur cumin retinal study.
[0023] Generally however, according to studies, a deteriorated sense of pure aroma or odorant
detection in the left nostril is neurologically significant when the subject is screened.
Such pure aroma screens indirectly assess the condition of the olfactory nerve by
presenting pure aroma in a controlled way, such that the concentration and sort of
aroma is manipulated by the testing personnel and only one nostril at a time is served
aroma. The relative strength of the nostrils is the metric of interest in detecting
AD.
[0024] All known early onset AD screening methods lack a uniform staging system for measuring
and communicating the relative state of a patient's AD development. A uniform disease
risk staging system needs to be established similar to the cancer staging of 1-4.
Various cancers have well defined staging methods. Different cancers have different
criteria for staging wherein stage 1 is less serious than stage 3, for example.
[0025] A common diagnostic scoring metric for AD would advance medical research studies
by,
inter alia, universally defining AD developmental stages.
[0026] Further, a risk factor scoring method that takes the totality of a patient's medical
history and the various AD screening methods into account to render an AD "risk factor"
is also badly needed. These two metrics would sort people into those with a low risk
factor, a high risk factor without AD and an actual AD stage.
[0027] A staging metric would also help Doctors diagnose AD earlier and with a greater level
of confidence than has been previously possible with living patients. AD diagnosis
at an earlier point in disease development will benefit the patient by facilitating
more efficacious early AD treatment, hopefully before significant brain damage occurs.
[0028] An AD scaling method would also provide a pool of qualified candidates at various
stages of the disease for clinical trials of potentially efficacious drugs. Having
access to a large pool of known early onset AD patients would certainly advance clinical
studies dramatically.
[0029] However, all known AD screening methods have various unrelated Alzheimer's Disease
risk scoring systems, or none at all. Therefore, these screens fail to offer doctors
an overall AD risk factor in the context of the full medical history for that particular
patient. A meaningful and fundamentally helpful report for Doctors to use in deciphering
and communicating the actual risk of a certain patient developing AD in the future
is sorely needed.
[0030] An efficacious AD risk factor report for doctors enables the rendering of a firm
diagnosis of Alzheimer 's disease based upon a clear medical standard that can be
universally understood and communicated. Typically, AD cases are not firmly diagnosed
until all alternative causes of dementia that is clearly presented, have all been
ruled out.
[0031] An Alzheimer's disease risk factor scoring system that is able to encompass all the
various relevant medical history issues as well as interpret efficacious AD screens,
that have been performed on the living, is needed to provide medical practitioners
diagnostic information in a useable form. The staging method needs to look at the
overall data for a particular patient to put all the data into a proper context. An
accepted system for staging Alzheimer 's disease is currently lacking due to the previous
difficulty in even confirming that a particular patient actually has the disease at
all, prior to the autopsy.
[0032] Amyloid plaque deposits and protein tangles are the microscopic evidence sought to
confirm AD in diseased patients in autopsy. Amyloid plaque deposits also appear in
the retina and iris and are visible with various stains that jump the blood brain
barrier and are fluoresced by specific spectrums of light. Thus, is possible to observe
plaque deposits in the eye of a living person non-invasively and deduce from what
is seen in the eye what would be apparent if the brain cavity were opened.
[0033] A patient suffering some dementia (which easily diagnosed with cognitive testing),
who has a notable deterioration of sensitivity to pure aroma on the left side, without
a known medical reason, who also has had a baseline retinal photograph examined by
an ophthalmologist and then had a cur cumin plaque detection study done which identified
amyloid plaque on their retina, almost certain has AD. The relative amount of amyloid
plaque seen is directly proportional to the stage of AD.
[0034] Other neurologic screening methods, e.g., the University of Pennsylvania's "UPSIT"
aroma sensitivity screen claim to identify olfactory and scent memory problems, but
fails to differentiate between the two nostrils, and therefore fails to identify any
odorant threshold differential between the nostrils. Further, the UPSIT scratch and
sniff scent identification test fails by design to differentiate between pure aromas
that are precived exclusively by the olfactory organ or harsher smell by the trigmenial
system. Mixing Lemon and Gasoline in one test is certainly behind the times in olfactory
research.
[0035] In our research we discovered that the fidelity of the scratch and sniff samples
is amazingly poor. The ink used for scratch and sniff printing requires that odorants
used be completely free of water, which requires chemical approximations of scents
rather than actual essential oils or the like. The UPSIT also uses combinations of
aromas that certainly are not universally familiar to people. Bubble Gum for example
comes in many flavors which makes it tricky to pick the aroma the testers expected.
[0036] In a small clinical trial performed by Inspired Technology the scratch and sniff
scent for Orange was thought to be Bubble Gum by 7 participants, Cheddar Cheese by
1 with 2 not hazarding a guess with no one of the 10 recognizing Orange. Cheddar Cheese
on the other hand was thought by 8 out of 10 to be paint thinner with no one guessing
Cheddar Cheese. Lemon was thought to be Motor Oil by 7 out of 10 participants with
one hazarding Rose.
[0037] The UPSIT is also culturally biased as familiar scents in the USA are not so familiar
in India, for example. Thus, a test media that uses actual essential oils, with a
device that differentiates the nostrils and has a way to offer a plurality of aroma
test sets at little expense.
[0038] Consequently, the UPSIT data cannot be used as an accurate screening mechanism for
at least AD.
[0039] Thus, a need exists in the art generally for an inexpensive, easy to use, accurate
and repeatable clinically significant device, system and method for detecting an asymmetric
(left vs right) differential in the olfactory detection threshold of a patient, preferably
without a required "reset" period. Such devices, systems and methods may be used to
assist a physician in screening and/or detecting AD and/or risk of developing AD,
before the clinical presentation of dementia occurs.
[0040] The present invention addresses these, among other, needs.
BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0041] The present system is directed in various embodiments to devices, systems and methods
for detection, evaluation and/or monitoring olfactory dysfunction by measuring and
determining the patient's olfactory detection threshold for the left and the right
nostril. More specifically, the present invention relates to devices, systems and
methods for detecting an asymmetric differential in a patient's olfactory detection
threshold (left vs right nostril) which, when present, may be used as a tool to screen,
detect, diagnose and/or monitor relative olfactory deterioration resulting from Alzheimer's
disease. A preferred embodiment comprises cascading aromas by serially administering
more than one pure odorant to the patient's nostrils, left vs right, with measurement
of the time, or numbers of breaths, required to cognitively notice the pure odorants'
presence and without a reset or clearing period between presentation of successive
odorants. The device disclosed is also useful for scent identification tests and scent
concentration tests as a testing platform.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0042]
Fig. 1 illustrates a cross-sectional front view of one embodiment of the present invention.
Fig. 2 illustrates a cross-sectional front view of the embodiment of Figure 1 in exhalation
mode.
Fig. 3 illustrates a cross-sectional front view of the embodiments of Figs. 1 and
2 in inhalation mode.
Fig. 4 illustrates a top view of one embodiment of a flap valve.
Figs. 5A and 5B illustrate a top view of two embodiments of a multi-chamber odorant
or pure odorant cartridge.
Figure 6A illustrates a ratcheted gear advancer mechanism.
Figure 6B illustrates a wound spring gear advancer mechanism.
Figure 7A illustrates one embodiment of a valve member sheet.
Figure 7B illustrates one embodiment of an individual valve member.
Figure 8A illustrates a perspective and exploded view of a glass jar with threaded
cap.
Figure 8B illustrates a cross-sectional front view of one embodiment corresponding
to Fig. 8A.
Figure 8C illustrates an exploded view of the embodiment of Figs 8A and 8B.
Figure 9A illustrates a perspective and partial exploded view of one embodiment of
the present invention.
Figure 9B illustrates a perspective exploded partial view of the embodiment of Figure
9A.
Figure 9C illustrates a partial cutaway front view of the embodiment of Figures 9A
and 9B.
Figure 10A illustrates a front view of one embodiment of the present invention with
active left nostril odorant or pure odorant pathing.
Figure 10B illustrates a front view of one embodiment of the present invention with
active right nostril odorant or pure odorant pathing.
Figure 11A illustrates a front view of one embodiment of a loaded pure odorant or
pure odorant cartridge.
Figure 11B illustrates a side view of the embodiment of Fig. 11A illustrating the
loading of an odorant or pure odorant into the cartridge.
Figure 11C illustrates a perspective view of one embodiment of the present invention.
Figure 12A illustrates a side exploded view of one embodiment of an odorant or pure
odorant cartridge.
Figure 12B illustrates an exploded view of one embodiment of odorant or pure odorant
cartridge.
Figure 12C illustrates a side cutaway view of one embodiment of odorant or pure odorant
cartridge.
Figure 12D illustrates a side cutaway view of one embodiment of odorant or pure odorant
cartridge.
Figure 12E illustrates a side cutaway view of one embodiment of odorant or pure odorant
cartridge.
Figure 12F illustrates a side view of one embodiment of odorant or pure odorant cartridge.
Figure 13A illustrates a side and cross-sectional view of one embodiment of the present
invention in active nostril inhalation mode.
Figure 13B illustrates the embodiment of Figure 13A in active nostril exhalation mode.
Figure 13C illustrates the embodiment of Figs. 13A and 13B in passive nostril inhalation
and exhalation mode.
Figure 14A illustrates a top view of one embodiment of odorant or pure odorant cartridge.
Figure 14B illustrates a top view of a layer of material for one embodiment of the
odorant or pure odorant cartridge.
Figure 14C illustrates a side cutaway view of one embodiment of the present invention.
Figure 15A illustrates a top cutaway view of one embodiment of the present invention.
Figure 15B illustrates a top cutaway view of one embodiment of the present invention.
Figure 16A illustrates a side view of one embodiment of the present invention.
Figure 16B illustrates a front view of one embodiment of the present invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0043] While the invention is amenable to various modifications and alternative forms, specifics
thereof are shown by way of example in the drawings and described in detail herein.
It should be understood, however, that the intention is not to limit the invention
to the particular embodiments described. On the contrary, the intention is to cover
all modifications, equivalents, and alternatives falling within the spirit and scope
of the invention.
[0044] The present system is directed in various embodiments to devices, systems and methods
for detection, evaluation and/or monitoring olfactory dysfunction by measuring and
determining the patient's olfactory detection threshold for the left and the right
nostril. More specifically, the present invention relates to devices, systems and
methods for detecting an asymmetric differential in a patient's relative olfactory
detection threshold (left vs right nostril) which, when present, may be used as a
device to detect, diagnose and/or monitor olfactory deterioration resulting from Alzheimer's
disease.
Definitions
[0045] As used herein, "symmetric" or "symmetrical" means that there is not a significant
differential in the subject patient's ability to detect and/or identify odors between
odors administered and/or inhaled into the patient's left nostril vs. the patient's
right nostril as measured by the olfactory threshold determined for each nostril.
[0046] As used herein, "asymmetric" or "asymmetrical" means that there is a significant
asymmetry or differential in the subject patient's ability to detect and/or identify
odors between odors administered and/or inhaled into the patient's left nostril vs.
the patient's right nostril as measured by the olfactory threshold determined for
each nostril.
[0047] "Hyperosmia" is defined as increased olfactory acuity, or a decreased threshold for
detecting odors, and may be symmetric or asymmetric as those terms are defined herein.
Various embodiments of the present invention may detect and/or monitor hyperosmia
or treatments therefore.
[0048] "Hypoosmia is defined as diminished or decreased olfactory acuity, or an increased
threshold for detecting odors, and may be symmetric or asymmetric as those terms are
defined herein. Various embodiments of the present invention may detect and/or monitor
hypoosmia or treatments therefore.
[0049] "Anosmia" is defined as the inability to recognize odors and may be symmetric or
asymmetric as those terms are defined herein. Various embodiments of the present invention
may detect and/or monitor anosmia or treatments therefore.
[0050] "Dysosmia" is defined as the abnormal sense of smell and may be symmetric or asymmetric
as those terms are defined herein. Various embodiments of the present invention may
detect and/or monitor dysosmia or treatments therefore.
[0051] "Olfactory dysfunction" is defined herein as a patient with a disorder and/or condition
with one or more of the following: hyperosmia, hypoosmia, anosmia, and dysosmia. The
olfactory dysfunction may be symmetric or asymmetric as those terms are defined herein.
[0052] "Pure odorant", also referred to equivalently as "pure aroma" is defined as substances
including molecules and/or compounds which principally stimulate the olfactory cell
receptors associated with the olfactory nerve, aka the first cranial nerve, and that
do not trigger or excite the trigeminal nerve associated with the fifth cranial nerve.
A non-exhaustive and categorized listing of pure odorants follows:
The pure odorant Spice family comprises:
Cinnamon;
Clove;
Vanilla;
Nutmeg; and
Allspice.
The pure odorant Food family comprises:
Peanut / Peanut Butter;
Coffee;
Cocoa;
Apple;
Almond (bitter); and
Strawberry.
The pure odorant Herbal family comprises:
Peppermint;
Spearmint;
Wintergreen;
Allspice;
Parsley;
Sage;
Turmeric;
Thyme;
Basil;
Dill weed;
Caraway;
Anise;
Fennel;
Mace;
Palmarosa; and
Patchouli.
The pure odorant Floral family comprises:
Rose;
Lemongrass;
Rosemary;
Lavender;
Lilac;
Violet; and
Origanum.
The pure odorant Citrus family comprises:
Orange;
Tangerine;
Lemon;
Lime;
Mandarin;
Grapefruit;
Bergamot and
Petitgrain.
The pure odorant Wood and Resin based family comprises:
Eucalyptus;
Juniper berry;
Pine;
Tea tree;
Spruce;
Ho wood;
Cypress;
Cedar;
Birch;
Fir;
Cajeput;
Camphor;
Cassia;
Citronella;
Clary;
Copaiba;
Elemi;
Hydacheim;
Litsea; and
Niaouli.
[0053] "Pure odorant detection threshold" is defined as the point at which the concentration
of pure odorant molecules saturate the olfactory nerve to the extent that a cognitive
reaction first takes place. At this point, the subject patient is able to express
that he or she is smelling something, but not necessarily able yet to identify the
aroma by name. The pure odorant detection threshold may be found to be asymmetrical,
i.e., significantly different as between the nostrils, indicating olfactory dysfunction.
Alternatively, the pure odorant detection threshold may be found to be symmetrical
between the tested nostrils.
[0054] "Pure odorant identification threshold" represents a slightly longer latent period
than the "pure odorant detection threshold" as it is defined as the point at which
the patient is able to actually identify the pure odorant by name, indicating that
cognitive processing has occurred.
[0055] "Odorant" is defined herein as a compound that does trigger the trigeminal nerve.
[0056] "Odorant detection threshold" is defined as the point at which the concentration
of odorant molecules saturate the olfactory nerve to the extent that a cognitive reaction
first takes place. At this point, the subject patient is able to express that he or
she is smelling something, without necessarily identifying the aroma. The odorant
detection threshold may be found to be asymmetrical, i.e., significantly different
as between the nostrils, indicating olfactory dysfunction. Alternatively, the odorant
detection threshold may be found to be symmetrical between the tested nostrils.
[0057] "Odorant identification threshold" is defined herein as the point at which the patient
is able to actually identify the odorant by name, indicating that cognitive processing
has occurred. The odorant identification threshold may or may not be symmetrical between
the nostrils.
[0058] "Effective amount" of the odorant or pure odorant is defined as the amount of pure
odorant required to infuse the aroma airway passage during operation of the various
devices, systems and methods of the present invention sufficiently to enable a patient
to smell the pure odorant, i.e., when saturation of the olfactory nerve is sufficient
to enable the reaching of the pure odorant detection threshold for the patient and
nostril being tested.
[0059] "Clear air", also referred to as pure air, is defined as air that does not comprise
the odorant used in the inventive embodiments of the present invention. Preferably,
clear air comprises air that is substantially uncontaminated by any odorant, including
pure odorants. Clear air may comprise ambient air, i.e., atmospheric air, either filtered
or unfiltered, or air that is provided from a clear air source such as an air tank
or nebulizer and/or from a mechanized powered air pump as is well known in the art.
[0060] "Reset Period" is defined as a rest time between presentations or introductions of
odorants or pure odorants, known reset periods are in the range of 90 seconds.
[0061] Aroma detection testing is done for many reasons and in a number of ways to accomplish
various purposes, including diagnostic medical tests. Odor identification for example,
comprise a common olfactory function that is tested. Numerous odor identification
devices and methods have been developed to screen for what might be called a "scent
memory function". This sort of testing metric might be called "Tell me what you smell?"
This corresponds to the presently defined "pure odorant identification threshold".
This endpoint for testing has several serious problems, not the least of which is
the required inclusion of cognitive identification of the aroma or odor presented.
[0062] Pure aroma olfactory detection threshold response time is of particular clinical
interest, especially when done bilaterally. In other words, the same aroma sensing
test is preformed separately on each nostril and the test results compared, left nostril
vs right nostril. This is done without aroma identification even being required. Perhaps
the metric could be called, "Tell me when you smell something."
A baseline of pure air vs aroma laden air as a testing metric
[0063] Concentrations of a single aroma may be gradually increased in unscented air until
cognitive awareness of the presence of the aroma is noted. The distance between the
aroma source (a spoonful of peanut butter) and the nostril may be measured as a diagnostic
metric upon the patient first noting the peanut butter aroma. "With your eyes closed
and one nostril covered, tell me when you first smell the aroma, which I am slowly
moving closer to your nose along the ruler".
[0064] Alternatively, the time interval can be measured in seconds between aroma presentation
to the subject, who is inhaling through an aroma presentation device, until the time
interval ends upon cognitive notice that an aroma was noted. "Tell me the second you
smell the aroma". Time in seconds is the metric recorded, indirectly measuring the
level of odor concentration of aroma required to trigger cognitive notice.
[0065] Similarly, the number of breaths taken from the point of first introduction or presentation
of the aroma until cognitive notice by the subject is a valid metric indirectly scaling
the aroma detection ability of the nostrils.
[0066] The aroma presentation device might emit an audible tone when the exhalation portion
of the breathing cycle is taking place to help the testing personnel note the precise
number of breaths taken during the presentation of the aromas, in this mode of testing.
The number of breaths taken before cognitive notice of the aroma is also an indirect
measurement of the concentration of aroma required to get cognitive notice, which
measures olfactory function.
[0067] Finally, the metric of the absolute concentration of an increasing aroma level required
for cognitive notice, (as measured by an electronic nose module with a digital readout),
may be used in the pure air vs aroma air laden air model of bilateral olfactory testing.
A plurality of sample of one pure aroma with a spectrum of dilutions might be presented
with the smallest concentration detectable ramped up in small steps to a stronger
concentration might be used with first one nostril and then the other to detect the
weaker nostril.
[0068] The metric of single aroma might be considered comparing no smell in the air as a
baseline compared to a slowly increasing concentration of pure aroma infused in clear
room and recording some definable metric used for clinical comparison between the
nostrils. All of these metrics indirectly score olfactory function for detection of
pure aromas.
[0069] Controlling the presentation of aroma may be done in a number of ways, each with
advantages and disadvantages which may be mitigated with proper protocols and advanced
device design.
- 1. Testing bilateral olfactory acuity using a contained and controlled aroma source has the advantage of removing the skewing effect of the movement of room air.
A variable control completely lacking in the distance to the nose method mentioned
above. The aroma is introduced directly into the nostril of the person being tested
with this method.
The aroma concentration is thus more consistent, controllable and the results more
repeatable when the aroma is contained and directed into a nostril. Containing the
aroma source and directing it into the nostril of the test subject allows a precisely
measured presentation of aroma containing air, with the cognitive threshold sensitivity
scored or quantified numerically in a number of ways. A reset period between testing
events must also be allowed using any method that presents only one aroma since the
comparison is no aroma vs aroma detected.
Containing aroma within a device presents potential issues with "mechanical latency".
Aroma molecules tend to stick to certain materials more than on others. Any amount
of latent aroma tends to confuse the subject of the screening, but it is possible
to contain aroma without contaminating the device and render the screen inaccurate,
as will be explained below.
- 2. The time in seconds between control air with no aroma present and a controlled
increasing concentration of aroma becoming detectable is a useful metric for bilateral aroma sensitivity testing. When the test is done
sequentially for both nostrils using the same device and same aroma source, the ratio
of aroma sensitivity may be accurately tested by using time. The nostril that takes
longer or requires a higher level of aroma to recognize the presence of the aroma
is the weaker nostril. A reset period between screening events is still required if
only one aroma is used.
- 3. The number of breaths it takes to recognize the presence of an aroma being presented beginning with breathing controlled air with no aroma present is
a potentially useful testing metric that has the advantage of not even requiring a
clock. A reset period between screening events is required since only one aroma is
being used.
- 4. Cascading a series of pure aromas presented to a single nostril where the number of seconds or the number of breaths required to cognitively realize
that an alternative pure aroma is presented generates meaningful data and can quantitatively
rate the relative performance of the two nostrils. Using at least two pure odorants
presented one after another makes a reset period between events unnecessary, which
will save time administering the screen using this method.
[0070] Of all methods of aroma screening noted, the lack of a reset period is particularly
significant. When a plurality of aromas are presented sequentially, the olfactory
nerve and brain can only concentrate on one aroma at a time due to the phenomena of
"olfactory nerve dissonance". The function works to avoid our senses overwhelming
us. We can ignore what we have sensed previously to be quickly ready to focus on something
new... and in prehistoric times, potentially dangerous.
[0071] It is a known phenomenon of the olfactory nerve that the human sense of smell is
elegantly sequential in its ability to note a specific new odor and "forget" or ignore
the previous aroma. This effect is called odor dissonance. This feature of olfactory
function is of significant utility in bilateral pure aroma testing using a cascading
method. This test might be described as "tell me when the aroma you smell has changed
to a new aroma" not "tell when you can smell one aroma" or "can you name the aroma"?
[0072] When an aroma is presented and a second aroma becomes notable, the brain "forgets"
the previous aroma and concentrates on the fresh aroma. Cascading aromas thus takes
advantage of that primitive neurological effect to evade the reset period required
in single aroma screening methods.
[0073] 7. Odor identification tests generally contain a plurality of familiar aromas which may be cognitively challenging
to demented patients who struggle to find the word in their failing memory that describes
an aroma that seems familiar to them, but is hard to place its name. Simply asking
someone to note when the present aroma changes to a fresh aroma, as in the cascading
screen, without being required to name the aroma is less taxing cognitively.
[0074] Most participants using a screen for AD will be older and likely already presenting
some dementia. While potentially helpful in confirming general dementia, odor identification
tests, especially unilaterally and without the distinction of the aromas being pure
are worthless in diagnosing AD. Odor identification per se, simply has not proven
to be helpful in detecting AD.
[0075] Thus, at least two pure odorants, or a plurality thereof, may be cascaded without
requiring the subject to identify any of the aromas and the screen will still generate valid results. Should a subject spontaneously
name a pure odorant, no harm is done, but it is not required that the aroma be named
or is it helpful to obtain valid results.
[0076] Cascading Aromas, an preferred alternative aroma detection screening metric;
Cascading a sequence of a plurality of pure aromas without a pure air reset period
between aromas also scales the relative olfactory thresholds of the nostrils and has
distinct advantages. The aromas may be presented manually where the aroma device is
advanced to present a fresh aroma as the previous aroma is consumed or the device
may be mechanically spring loaded, where the aromas are changed at the push of a button
by the test subject during the screen. Alternatively, more than one device may be
used to present the more than two odorants, or pure odorants to the patient.
[0077] The olfactory function of dissonance is far faster than "resetting" with a time delay,
such as is required to reach a "no aroma detection condition" using clear air in preparation
for a next aroma test event. The human olfactory latency period between having sensed
a first aroma and being able to switch to sense a second aroma is far faster than
going from aroma laden air to clear air.
[0078] The ability to ignore a first aroma and fully concentrate on a second aroma is of
significant utility in using a cascading pure aroma threshold testing method. This
method uses a metric of "rapid sequential aroma scoring". "Cascading" a plurality
of pure aromas, presented one immediately after another, ignores the currently required
90 second reset period between aroma presentations. This method speeds up the overall
bilateral aroma testing process dramatically, as well as reducing scent latency issues.
[0079] The period of time, we shall call the "olfactory threshold latency period" is an
indirect measurement of the condition of the olfactory nerve, which is of clinical
significance in detecting localized deterioration of the brain. Adding a number of
such latency periods together creates a larger sample from which to more finely deduce
the relative sensitivity of the nostril. Enlarging the aroma presentation device from
1 liter to 1.5 liters will increase the number of breaths or the number of seconds
it takes to note a fresh aroma. While the mean number of breaths with a 1 liter aroma
device appears to be 4, 50% more volume will increase to 6 the average number of breaths
per event.
[0080] Aroma presentation devices without an aroma chamber, such as the one presented in
Fig. 10 and higher, reduce the time spent breathing aroma infused air and allow an
interesting plurality of aromas to fade in and out quickly.
[0081] The longer the latency period of one nostril, the weaker the sense of smell in that
nostril. What we seek to detect is a significant relative deficit, particularly on
the left side rather than an absolute value.
[0082] Theoretically, and according to previous clinical testing, the longer the period
of time between exposure to aroma infused air and cognitive notice of that aroma,
the worse the olfactory deterioration is in a particular nostril. The more time that
is required to note the aroma, or a higher concentration of aroma required to trigger
cognitive notice of that aroma, when tested bilaterally indicates relative olfactory
deterioration of the two sides. More breaths equal more time and relative olfactory
deterioration of the nerves associated with one nostril.
[0083] The memory function of an aroma, once cognitively recognized, (not necessarily named)
remains in the olfactory "Que.", until replaced by a subsequent aroma. It is thus,
very hard to concentrate on smelling more than one aroma at a time. The new aroma
replaces the previous aroma in our active olfactory memory.
[0084] "Olfactory aroma memory latency", presents potential issues using a single aroma
vs the clear air (air with no detectable aroma) mode of testing. It is hard to forget
the recently presented aroma when only compared with theoretically clear unscented
room air, making us hypersensitive to any latency of the first aroma. Unscented air
in that method of testing must be used to purge the olfactory nerve and the aroma
presentation device of latent aroma in preparation for the next testing event. Olfactory
aroma latency is defeated by cascading a plurality of at least two pure odorants without
a reset period.
[0085] A "reset" of the olfactory nerve may be defeated by even the slightest hint of the
recently presented aroma. Aroma which is still lingering in the air or clinging to
the airways of the aroma presentation device or the nostril can easily contaminate
otherwise clear room air and spoil the sensitivity of the test. This is really the
downfall of a one aroma screen.
[0086] While the recently presented aroma may be very faint after a reset period, the human
sense of smell in some people is amazingly strong. The aroma latency issue thus creates
a potential problem in obtaining accurate bilateral olfactory threshold sensitivity
data with a clear air baseline sort of test.
[0087] Faint mechanical latency and human aroma memory latency issues, when using a handheld
aroma presentation device, may be successfully overcome by "cascading" a new pure
aroma immediately after another without using a clear air "palate cleansing" interval
between aroma testing events. As soon as a first aroma is detected a subsequent aroma
is strongly presented causing the first aroma to fade from memory without the problematic
and time consuming step of clearing the olfactory "palate" with clear air.
[0088] A metric for bilateral olfactory threshold cascading testing is provided:
The testing method and scoring metric of finding the sum of at least two olfactory
threshold detection periods, corresponding to at least two pure odorants, in seconds
or in the number of breaths, derived from presenting a series of pure aromas, presented
sequentially one after another. The aromas are presented in rapid order to one nostril,
without clearing the olfactory nerve with unscented air between pure the aromas. While
using as few as 2 aromas may provide meaningful clinical data, since there are so
many pure aromas to choose from a plurality of even 20 such aromas develops a more
interesting test and extends the test cycle which also presents more defined nostril
sensitivity differentials.
[0089] The identical test is then run on the other nostril and cumulative results compared
to scale the bilateral pure air aroma detection thresholds of the patient. When the
test subject notes that a new aroma is sensed, the device is immediately advanced
to the next aroma either manually or automatically with a spring loaded, indexed sort
of mechanical arrangement. A circular presentation method where the first aroma is
also the first and last sample presented has clinical merit.
[0090] A method for cascading aromas for aroma presentation devices with an aroma chamber.
[0091] A first aroma is presented and the test subject told to take three breaths, upon
the third exhalation, the device is advanced and the second aroma is immediately presented.
[0092] When the second aroma is sensed, a third aroma (if used) is immediately presented
etc. This is done without a "reset period" using unscented air between the pure aromas
presented.
A method for cascading aromas
[0093] A first aroma is presented and the test subject told to take three breaths, upon
the fifth exhalation, the device is advanced and the second aroma is immediately presented.
[0094] When the second aroma is sensed, a third aroma (if used) is immediately presented
etc... This is done without a "reset period" using unscented air between the pure
aromas presented.
[0095] A few as two pure odorants may be used by cycling between them. Alternately, a large
plurality of different pure aromas may be used. When the plurality of aromas have
all been presented and the device has cycled back to the first aroma, the cumulative
time elapsed clock is stopped and the seconds for that nostril recorded or the number
of breaths taken is noted. Thus, the time in seconds between start and stop tones
becomes the metric to be recorded for that nostril. Alternately, the sum of number
of breaths per aroma is added up to scale the nostril being tested.
[0096] An audible tone may also be emitted during the exhalation portion of the breath cycle
so testing personal can be aware of the number of breaths taken during the testing
process and be aware of potential hyperventilation and the number of breaths taken
between tones is also a metric that may be of some utility.
[0097] The patient may be asked to count breaths if the cascading device is manually advanced.
The subject may take an additional breath to confirm that the aroma has changed but
will be asked to state the number of breaths taken before they actually noted the
fresh aroma. The number of breaths is recorded for each nostril.
[0098] A battery of olfactory threshold testing for both nostrils may thus be performed
very quickly if a plurality of pure aromas are presented one after another, immediately
after each fresh aroma is detected, rather than waiting for the subject to recognize
that there is "clear air" or the complete absence of aroma residual or latency.
[0099] Utilizing a cascading aroma method means that the newly presented aroma concentration
seems much stronger than any faint latent aroma from previous aromas, thus overcoming
both human and mechanical latency issues with the additional advantage of speeding
up the testing process dramatically by abandoning a reset period between aroma events.
[0100] The plurality of pure aromas used may be placed in any order that puts the most distinct
odors between similar but different aromas to help the subject differentiate between
the aromas. Actual clinical testing has been done cascading from 3 to 6 pure aromas
with statistically similar results.
[0101] Any number of aromas may be used as long as the aroma is advanced upon cognitive
notice of the instant aroma. As few as two aromas may be used alternatively, but 6
or even 8 completely different aromas in sequence may be used with this method of
testing. Completely changing the aromas is more far interesting to the subject than
alternating between only two or three aromas.
[0102] If, as in the previous example, using a 1.5 liter aroma chamber, the subject averaged
10 seconds per aroma presentation, before cognitive recognition of a fresh aroma had
taken place, a complete test battery of 10 events per nostril could be done on both
nostrils in about 2 minutes or less.
[0103] Alternatively, rather than measuring a plurality of pure aroma detection periods
in seconds, the number of breaths it takes to advance from the first aroma sequentially
back to the first aroma is an alternative metric. In other words, 25 breaths for the
left and 18 breaths for the right is a meaningful scoring method. The breath tones
sounds emitted are to allow supervision of the test procedure by clinical staff members.
[0104] The cognitive load factor is much less when the subject simply notes that a new aroma
is detected by pushing a momentary button to advance to the next aroma, rather than
remembering exactly what the aroma is and cognitively coming up with the name for
it. Simply mashing a button upon noting a fresh aroma has been smelled is very intuitive
and easy to learn.
[0105] Lacking an automatic aroma cascading mechanism, the device works to offer an aroma
by presenting 5 breaths, manually switch to a fresh aroma and handing the device back
to the subject with the first aroma infused in a volume of air in the chamber ready
to be replaced by further inhalations. The number of breaths it takes to consume the
first aroma contained in the aroma testing device until a fresh aroma is pumped up
to the nostril indirectly increases the concentration of the fresh aroma as the first
aroma cases away until cognitive notice is achieved. The process is repeated for further
aroma presentation events and the results noted.
The Cascading Aromas Device
[0106] The described hand held aroma detection device present a much more likely commercially
viable embodiment of bilateral aroma testing for widespread clinical use than the
larger afore mentioned desktop units or peanut butter and ruler as an apparatus. The
handheld device, potentially removably clipped to a plaque on the wall of an examining
room presents the notion of aroma testing being suitable for widespread, general clinical
use as a neurological screening tool.
[0107] However, the aroma presentation device and aroma media might be disposable, which
has the advantage of using a sterile device for each patient, having a fresh device
would eliminate latent aromas and the cost of a disposable screening device might
be commercially more profitable than reusing it for multiple patients.
[0108] A multiple aroma cascade presentation device might be designed such that the test
is self-administered. The person being tested would simply hold the device comfortably
up to their nostrils, close their eyes and press a button on the handheld device to
automatically advance to the next aroma immediately upon noting the current aroma
being presented to them. One first nasal cannula would present an aroma while the
other second cannula would provide clear air. The device might be symmetrical such
that it only need be taken away from the nostrils and reversed to make the second
nostril the one presented aroma while the first nostril receives fresh air.
[0109] A series of tones could signal the starting point and ending point of the plurality
of aroma presentations. A distinct audible tone, such as a dinging sound, is sounded
when the first aroma is presented and when the last aroma is noted. The tones are
to allow time interval measurement by the clinical staff members as opposed to counting
breaths.
[0110] A distinct "exhalation tone or honking noise" could indicate that a breath has been
exhaled. The handheld aroma presentation device emits an audible tone during exhalation
to make the testing personnel aware of the breathing pattern of the subject.
[0111] A multiple chambered pure aroma or pure odorant cartridge may be mechanically spring
loaded to advance in only one direction, one aroma chamber at a time. The multi cavity
aroma media is rotated into alignment with a single airway communicating with the
nostril, the device automatically advancing to the next aroma sample when actuated
by pushing a control button.
[0112] With a hand held aroma presentation device without an aroma chamber, a first aroma
is presented and the subject is told to breath normally and then push a button conveniently
located on the hand held aroma presentation device when they smell the aroma. A tone
may be emitted by the device as it advances to the second aroma and a visual readout
would confirm the aroma chamber in alignment with the airway for the test administrator
to observe.
[0113] A multiple chambered pure aroma or pure odorant cartridge may be mechanically spring
loaded to advance in only one direction, one aroma chamber at a time. The multi cavity
aroma chamber is rotated into alignment with a single airway communicating with the
nostril, the device automatically advancing to the next aroma chamber when actuated
by pushing a control button.
[0114] A first aroma is presented and the subject is told to take 5 breaths and then push
a button conveniently located on the hand held aroma presentation device. A tone may
be emitted by the device as it advances to the second aroma and a visual readout would
confirm the aroma chamber in alignment with the airway for the test administrator
to observe.
[0115] Upon advancing sequentially though all the aromas, back to first aroma, pushing the
button to indicate that the first aroma (and last) was noted, a discrete audible tone
indicates that the first (and last) aroma has been noted. The time sequence is stopped
at that instant, the period in seconds between tones is the metric recorded for that
nostril.
[0116] The timer may be a computer device, stop watch or a timer disposed and integrated
into the hand held aroma presentation device.
[0117] Alternatively, the aroma presentation device might be manually adjusted to present
one aroma at a time for the counting of breaths to the point of noticing a fresh aroma.
The same device might also contain a plurality of aroma chambers such that an aroma
identification test with more than 20 aromas supported might be done with the device.
[0118] The number of seconds can be counted from the first breath taken through the plurality
of aromas until the first aroma is recycled to the last aroma, which is the stopping
point of the test. For laboratory testing purposes a simple gas flow meter might be
placed in line with the air inlet port to confirm that a uniform flow of air is being
inhaled for each nostril being tested.
[0119] The number of seconds can be counted from the first breath to the breath where the
fresh aroma is noted. For laboratory testing purposes a gas flow meter might be placed
in line with the air inlet port to confirm that a uniform flow of air is being inhaled
for each nostril being tested.
Dealing with Aroma Latency Issues
[0120] Such hand held aroma presentation devices that sequential offer pure air as opposed
to aroma laden air and then reset back to pure air can have the previously mentioned
"mechanical aroma latency" issue.
[0121] When a slight hint of the single aroma being used is still detectable by the test
subject in the optimally pure air, it is a "mechanical aroma latency issue" as opposed
to human latency factors.
[0122] Aroma latency in either form, mechanical or human aroma memory, nullify or distort
the testing perimeter. Mechanical aroma latency creates issues in accurate testing
of subjects who can even slightly smell the previous aroma for any reason in the clear
air provided, before the device ought to deliver the aroma-infused air for a controlled
testing event.
[0123] Materials with a molecularly rough textured surface or a "high surface energy" airway
might tend to capture aroma molecules which may later be detectable in the otherwise
clear air. Thus, smooth surfaces and low energy surface are preferred to allow most
aroma molecules to pass by without adhering to the airways of the device.
[0124] The mechanical aroma latency effect is exacerbated by potential human odor memory,
which makes one particularly sensitive to a single previously smelled odor for a period
of time that may be much greater than a 90 second reset period.
[0125] Overcoming both human and mechanical aroma latency issues in handheld aroma presentation
devices are addressable in the following ways.
- 1. Reduce the aroma concentration and volume used as aroma sources to the bare minimum
amount of pure aroma required to accomplish the test function.
- 2. Using an ideal aroma formulation for the purpose of the test may mitigate mechanical
aroma issue significantly.
- 3. Using a cascaded aroma testing method does not require a pure unscented air mode
significantly nullifies the effect of trace amounts of latent, previously presented
aroma as a second, stronger aroma masks the far weaker previously presented, but still
faintly latent previous aroma
- 4. Using a plurality of aromas without switching to a pure air presentation will tend
to also overcome human aroma latency by replacing the latest aroma held in odor memory
with a fresh aroma
- 5. Mechanical design minimizing surface areas exposed to aroma infused air and special
materials used in manufacturing hand held aroma detection devices would also tend
to further mitigate mechanical aroma latency issues using materials that do not attract
aroma.
- 6. Clear air pathways could pass through filtration or electrostatic plates to remove
airborne aroma molecules
- 7. Using a disposable device allows a perfectly clean device for each screening
- 8. It may be possible to wash the device to remove old aroma adhered to the parts.
[0126] Oleophobic airway parts and potentially even the device hollow body that is exposed
to aroma laden air could reduce significantly mechanical aroma latency since "nothing
sticks to teflon". The aroma latency effect nullification by oleophobic materials
is due to aroma molecules being repelled by such surfaces rather than being attracted
by them, as is the case with many common plastics, such as PVC. Having a low surface
energy airway gives passing aroma no place to "stick" on a molecular level so it passes
by without contaminating the surface of the airway. Manufacturing aroma devices where
air pathways and potential the entire interior of the device's hollow body are produced
using a class of oleophobic materials provide less aroma contamination potential.
This class of material will significantly reduce or practically eliminate mechanical
aroma latency due to surface attraction of aroma molecules.
[0127] Lining air pathways with oleophobic interior coatings or using Teflon surfaces in
places exposed to aroma could thus dramatically reduce mechanical aroma latency issues.
[0128] The non-exhaustive group of such preferred plastics and specialty materials that
would tend to reduce the effect of capturing stray aroma molecules include; Teflon
class plastics, silicone materials and a number of oleophobic coatings and resins.
Oleophobic coating and resins may be applied to metal, glass or ceramic hollow body
surfaces used as handheld aroma testing device hollow body parts or airways.
[0129] Some oleophobic resins require "firing" at up to 700 degrees F, which would preclude
manufacturing aroma presentation devices with plastics and using such resins. Further,
the oleophobic effect of Teflon class plastics is fundamentally as strong as even
the very best such resins and coatings.
[0130] Teflon class plastics such as PFA (Perflouoroalkoxy), PTFE (Polytetrafluoroethelyne)
and FEP (TetraFluorEthylene-Perfluorpropylene) may be obtained in clear, white or
colors and may be extruded, injection molded, die stamped or blow molded, thus enabling
preferred methods of device mass production and support attractive industrial designs.
Other plastics having a relatively low surface energy, and thus likely to repeal aroma
in contact with the material are, polystyrene, polyethylene, Tedlar, PVA, EVA and
Acetal coatings of oleophobic resins.
[0131] Alternatively, rather than repelling aroma molecules using oleophobic coatings or
materials as mentioned above, electrostatic resins or electrically charged plates
could capture stray aroma molecules to prevent the clear air from being contaminated
by latent aroma from previous aroma presentations.
[0132] The preferred materials and design embodiment for controlling latent aroma must clearly
be repelling latent aroma molecules in the first place, rather than trapping them.
Filtration media such as baking soda filters or absorbent airway coatings, activated
charcoal filtration, electrostatic filtering mechanisms and electrostatic resins all
ultimately reach a maximum aroma holding capacity and must be cleaned or filters replaced
to keep the aroma presentation device working as designed. This is not a preferred
embodiment.
[0133] Oleophobic solutions would tend to minimize contamination of the device by aroma
latency in the first place. Such devices would be much easier to clean, potential
refreshed with a simple occasional wipe down with a disposable paper towel. Better
to avoid the aroma contamination in the first place than to concentrate it in filters
to control the pure air contamination.
[0134] When a plurality of aromas are used, mechanical aroma latency countermeasures as
described above would largely prevent a detectable latent aroma situation, since the
newly presented aroma would be much stronger than the previously offered aroma, a
latent amount that might be only slightly detectable in clear air but not at all compared
to a fresh strong aroma.
[0135] Minimizing surface areas present less material to be contaminated. So design can
also mitigate aroma latency issues.
Multi-aroma chambered devices
[0136] A hand held aroma presentation device might have a plurality of aroma chambers, which
can be mechanically rotated or selectively re-aligned in a way as to present an open
pathway for only one aroma at a time. Such a hand held screening tool is a very desirable
apparatus.
[0137] Aromas are presented sequentially while closing access to all other aroma chambers.
Such a device would speed up the testing procedure dramatically and reduce or eliminate
significant aroma latency issues.
[0138] The person being tested would inhale through the aroma testing device to bring a
plume of aroma infused air through only one of the plurality of aroma chambers. The
aroma passing through the device air pathways into a nostril specula are presented
directly into the test subject's nostril.
[0139] The improved hand held aroma presentation device described herein, might have 20
or more separate aroma chambers. Each chamber will selectively rotate in line with
one airway port which is in fluid communication with the nostril of the person being
tested. Each aroma chamber has a felt like pellet or disk held in place that holds
a drop or more of aroma fluid. The active airway draws air through the absorbent pellet
or disk to infuse pure ambient air with an aroma.
[0140] The clinical employee or even the person being tested simply rotates an aroma presentation
selector to align the single airway with the next aroma in sequence. The device is
advanced immediately upon the test subject noting a fresh aroma was detected. When
the number of screening events required are completed the cumulative elapsed time
or number of breaths taken is recorded for each nostril and compared for a clinically
significant difference.
[0141] The same device may be used in scent identification where the aromas are numbered
such that the testing personnel can supervise the test as the subject checks off one
of 4 or 5 possible aromas they smell through the device. The device may then be reversed
to check the other nostril as 20 or more aroma are presented.
[0142] The aroma presentation device holds the multiple cavity aroma chamber part in rotational
alignment or in liner alignment with the hollow body. The segmented aroma chamber
part or disk in one embodiment can potentially only rotate or move in one direction
to advance the aromas and clicks in place to mechanically allow the single airway
path into the hollow body to be aligned with only one of the aroma chambers at a time.
[0143] Ergonomically located on the exterior of the aroma testing device may be a button.
The control button is mechanically disposed to swiftly advance the aroma chamber to
the next aroma upon the button being depressed. A tone may be emitted to denote advancement
to the next aroma. A special tone is emitted upon advancing from the first aroma to
the second aroma etc. A digital or mechanical timer may be included which times the
period from the second aroma being presented until that point cycles again.
[0144] The aroma chamber device may be spring loaded with a coil type spring, a small motor
or other mechanical device which upon the button being pushed advances the aroma chamber
to the next station. Ratcheting gears known to the art may be employed to insure that
the aroma chamber only advances in one direction. The audible tones may be electronic
or mechanical with one tone to denote each new aroma as it is presented and a second
distinctive tone is emitted at the presentation of aroma #1 when it appears as the
final aroma.
[0145] The exhalation airway is arranged such that an audible tone is emitted whenever the
test subject exhales. The number of exhalations required to complete the test may
be a metric of some interest. The number of breaths for each nostril may also be helpful
in insuring that the person was breathing equally through each nostril and not hyperventilating.
[0146] Each multi-cavity aroma cartridge comprises separate chambers for holding at least
two odorants or pure odorants, one odorant or pure odorant per chamber, but may hold
20 or more odorants, pure odorants.
[0147] Using the proposed rapid presentation or cascade of a plurality of pure aromas as
a testing perimeter and metric also solves the problem of clearing the aroma testing
device chamber and pure air pathway of a single aroma to return it to a clear air
mode in preparation for the next aroma presentation testing event. This issue is seen
most profoundly in the clear air vs single aroma mode of testing.
[0148] The sequential aroma cascade method simply does away with the clear air mode entirely
in favor of effectively resetting the olfactory nerve by presenting a fresh aroma
through the faster olfactory "reset" phenomenon of sensory dissonance.
[0149] Using the plurality of sequentially presented aromas as a testing method actually
simplifies the mechanical device required to present the aromas and manage the testing
events. Not being required to revert to a clear air mode between testing events nullifies
the need for a number of parts in many embodiments of previous handheld aroma testing
devices using only one aroma. Devices with a plurality of aromas also does away with
the requirement of a large aroma chamber in favor of simply passing clear air through
a plurality of aroma containing felt like elements.
[0150] A removable multi-chambered aroma element could be sold as a consumable test element
allowing for an easy way to refresh the device. After one or more aroma tests have
exhausted the rotating aroma multiple cavity cartridge or disk, is disposable. The
replaceable cartridge or disk contains a plurality of fresh pure aromas especially
formulated at the factory to work well with the aroma presentation device. Seals covering
ports in the multi cavity aroma chamber are removed and the fresh aroma cartridge
is installed. Alternatively, the entire device is disposable. The aroma media disk
disclosed may use actual essential oils and preserve them for a considerable shelf
life due to release strips sealing the aroma in a small chamber holding an absorbent
felt like member that allows air flow through it to infuse air with the aroma.
[0151] Figures 1-3 provide a housing 10 and a cap 200. Housing 10 comprises a top lip 12
defining an inner shoulder 14 and outer threads 16. Housing further defines inner
air chamber 18 having an air inlet 20 disposed therethrough that may be located on
bottom surface 22 of housing 10. Bottom surface 22 of housing 10 may further comprise
an connection aperture 24.
[0152] The embodiments of Figures 1-3 further comprise an upper gasket 28, affixed to the
outer lower surface 26 of the housing 20 and comprising a shape generally the same
as the shape of the housing's lower surface 26 and further comprising air inlet aperture
30 and connection aperture 32 therethrough. Air inlet aperture 30 matches and is aligned
with the air inlet 20, allowing fluid communication therethrough while connection
aperture 32 matches and is aligned with connection aperture 24.
[0153] The embodiment shown in Figure 1 further comprises an advancer mechanism 40 that
comprises an upper surface and a lower surface, wherein the upper surface is attached
to the upper gasket 28 and may comprise advancer button 42. As shown in Figures 6A
and 6B, advancer mechanism 40 may comprise a ratcheted gear mechanism 44 as is well
known in the art, or alternatively, a wound spring mechanism 46, or clock spring mechanism,
as is also well known to the skilled artisan. These exemplary mechanisms ensure that,
when advanced by actuating the advancer button 42, the pure odorant or pure aroma
cartridge advances in only one direction. Advancer mechanism 40 comprises an air inlet
aperture 47 and a connector aperture 48, wherein air inlet aperture 47 is matched
and aligned with air inlet aperture 30 of upper gasket and connector aperture 48 is
matched and aligned with connection aperture 32 of upper gasket.
[0154] The embodiment of Fig. 1 further comprises a lower gasket 50, affixed to the lower
surface of advancer mechanism 40 and comprising the same or similar features as the
upper gasket 28, i.e., an air inlet aperture 52 and connection aperture 54, wherein
air inlet aperture 52 matches with air inlet aperture 47 of advancer mechanism 40
and connection aperture 54 matches and is aligned with connection aperture 48 of advancer
mechanism 40.
[0155] The embodiments of Figs 1-3 comprise a pure odorant cartridge 60 that is rotatably
affixed to the lower surface of lower gasket 50 and comprises at least two odorant
chambers 62. The embodiment of Figure 1 further comprises the odorant chambers 62
being capable of rotating into individual fluid communication with air inlet aperture
52 of lower gasket 50.
[0156] For each illustrated embodiment of Figs 1-3, and as shown in Figures 5A and 5B, six
or eight, or any other number larger than one, odorant chambers 62 are provided. Pure
odorant cartridge 60 may comprise a central axis 64 around which the rotatable pure
odorant cartridge 60 rotates.
[0157] Central axis 64 comprises a top connector 66 which is rotatably aligned within connector
apertures 52, 48, 32 and 24 in the embodiment of Fig. 1.
[0158] Top connector 66 thus engages connector apertures 52, 48, 32 and 24 providing a snug
fit of all components described above against lower surface of housing. Application
of sufficient downward force will overcome the engagement of the top connector 66,
thereby allowing the pure odorant cartridge 60 to be removed. Consequently, it is
possible to reload a spent pure odorant cartridge 60 and replace it with re-engagement
of top connector 66 with connector apertures 52, 48, 32 and 24. Alternatively, a pure
odorant cartridge 60 that was previously loaded with pure odorant in odorant chambers
62 may be engaged with connector apertures 52, 48, 32 and 24. The embodiments in Figs
2 and 3 do not require advancer mechanism 40 or lower gasket 50.
[0159] Lower surface LS and in some embodiments, upper surface 68, of pure odorant cartridge
60 may be covered with an adhesive layer 70 comprising valves 72 aligned with the
pure odorant chambers 62 as in Figure 7A. Valves 72 may comprise resilient flaps 73
cut through the valve material, e.g., silicone or rubber, to allow air flow therethrough.
This layer prevents escape of the pure odorant within the chambers 62, but allows
air flow therethrough. Alternatively, individual valve elements 72A, generally of
the same construct as layer valves 72, may be provided as illustrated in Figure 7B.
Such valve elements may comprise an outer adhesive portion 74 to cover the related
chamber 62.
[0160] Pure odorant cartridge 60 may rotate by aid of the advancer mechanism 40 described
above or, alternatively, advancer mechanism 40 may be bypassed or be eliminated altogether.
See, e.g., Figures 2 and 3 for manually rotatably advanceable embodiments. In either
case, pure odorant cartridge 60 may be rotatably advanced manually, aligning an initial
pure aroma chamber 62 with air inlet aperture 52 of lower gasket 50.
[0161] With reference to Figs. 1-3, cap 200 comprises a body 201 defining a chamber 202
therein, a nasal port 204 and nasal port lumen 206 within nasal port 204, wherein
nasal port 204 is in fluid communication with chamber 202 and with the atmosphere
outside the nasal port 204. Nasal port 204 may be covered by a removable nasal specula
205 or the equivalent.
[0162] Cap 200 further comprises threads 207 that are capable of threaded communication
with outer threads 16 of housing. Other methods and mechanisms for joining the cap
200 with the housing 10 are certainly within the scope of the present invention. Moreover,
an alternate one-piece construction with cap merged with housing is also within the
scope of the present invention. Cap 200 further defines at least one exhalation valve
opening 208 through the cap body 201 which is shown with a resilient valve 210 disposed
over the at least one valve opening 208.
[0163] Figure 4 illustrates a flap valve 212, having a lip 214 that rests on housing's inner
shoulder 14 is provided. As known in the art, one portion of the flap valve is fixed
to the inner shoulder 14, while another portion of flap valve 212 is moveably disposed
on the inner shoulder 14. This arrangement allows air flow with sufficient force to
lift the moveably disposed portion of the flap valve 212 upward from the housing to
the cap and nasal port. It also prevents downward air flow from the nasal port and
cap into the housing.
[0164] Accordingly, an exhalation air flow path is provided within cap as best illustrated
in Figure 2. There, a patient exhales through the nasal port 204 into the cap chamber
202 and out of exhalation valve opening 208, as the downward air flow is blocked and
redirected by the closed flap valve 212. Alternatively, the patient may simply disengage
the nostril from the nasal port 204, exhale into the atmosphere and then reengage
the nostril with the nasal port 204 for a second inhalation.
[0165] Figure 3 illustrates the active inhalation air flow path, initiated by a patient
inhaling through nasal port 204 with sufficient force to enable the active path. Here,
external atmospheric air flows inwardly through the valve members 72 or 72A in alternative
embodiments, and into the pure odorant chamber 62 aligned therewith. The pure odorant
media therein infuses the incoming air with the pure odorant aroma and the infused
air flows through the aligned air inlet apertures and into the housing chamber 18.
The infused air flow pressure raises the flap valve 212 to enable the infused air
to flow into the cap chamber 202 and out of the nasal port 204 into the patient's
nostril.
[0166] Thus, this exemplary device may be used to present a more than one pure odorant in
a cascading fashion, i.e., sequentially and within a reset period between presentations.
Initially, a first pure odorant is made available for presentation to one nostril
of a patient, wherein the patent inhales to activate the inhalation air flow pathing
described above, and exhales into the device until a fixed number of breaths are reached,
or a fixed time has elapsed or until the patient recognizes they have reached the
pure odorant detection threshold, whereupon the relevant metric is observed and recorded.
At this point, the multi-chamber pure odorant cartridge 60 is advanced to the next
pure odorant and the process is repeated and again if additional pure odorants are
provided in the testing process and in the cartridge 60.
[0167] When the first nostril testing is completed, the same process is repeated with the
second nostril. Ultimately, the results are compiled and the left nostril and right
nostril data is compared for substantial differences between the left and right nostril
data sets.
[0168] Figures 8A-8C illustrate another embodiment comprising an aroma screening device
300 using an off-the-shelf glass jar with a threaded lid as a base. Lid assembly 302
comprises a die cut slip ring 304 in communication with a plastic top member 306 having
a series of apertures 308A, 308B, 308C therethrough. Nasal port element 310 comprises
a nasal port 312 therethrough which engages one of the apertures 308B. Nasal port
element 310 is operationally engaged with plastic top member 306 and with plastic
lower member 312 which comprises holes therethrough 314A, 314B. 314A is in fluid communication
with the nasal port 312. A tube 316 is provided, having a proximal end 317 in fixed
attachment, e.g., glued, to the plastic lower member 312, wherein the lumen 320 of
tube 316 is in fluid communication with nasal port 312 and hole 314B. Distal end of
tube 318 is in fixed attachment with the pure odorant chamber cover element 322 which
comprises a hole 324 therethrough in fluid communication with tube lumen 320, a pure
odorant chamber access aperture 326 and a pure odorant release aperture 328 disposed
on a side 330 of the pure odorant cover element 322. Pure odorant cover element 322
covers pure odorant cartridge 332 which is fixed in place at the bottom of the jar.
The entire assembly, aside from the fixed-in-place cartridge 332, is capable of rotation
from one pure odorant media 336 within a chamber 334 within cartridge 332 to the next,
or another, pure odorant media 336 within chamber 334.
[0169] Thus, a nasal port 312 is in rotatable fluid communication with a pure odorant cartridge
332 comprising at least two pure odorant chambers 334 each capable of holding a single
pure odorant medium 336. A central inhalation tube 316 in valved communication with
the atmosphere and with one of the pure odorant chambers 334 when the nasal port 312
is rotatably aligned with the desired pure odorant chamber 334. An exhalation path
is provided as illustrated that flows downward through the valve and into the central
tube 316, through the pure odorant media 336 within the aligned pure odorant chamber
334, infusing the inhaled air with the aligned pure odorant aroma. The infused air
then flow upwardly through the nasal port 312 and into the patient's nostril until
the patient signals reaching the pure odorant detection threshold or, in certain embodiments
a maximum number of breaths and/or time is reached. Rotation of the lid assembly to
another pure odorant chamber 334 allows repeat of the process without a reset period,
i.e., cascading of pure odorants.
[0170] Turning now to Figures 9A-9C, another embodiment of a multiple aroma presentation
device 400 is provided and comprising a (preferably) glass housing 402 defining a
chamber 404 therein having an open top edge 406 and a lid assembly 410 that is fixed
to the top edge 406 of the glass housing 402.
[0171] The lid assembly 410 comprises ajar lid 412 with a generally central stem opening
414 therethrough and a generally off-center air inlet port 416 therethrough covered
by flap valve 417, shown removed from covering port 416 for illustrative purposes.
[0172] Lid assembly 410 further comprises a nasal tip 418 having a lumen 419 therethrough
and aligned with the generally central stem opening 414 and in fluid communication
thereof. Nasal tip 418 further comprises one or more exhalation ports 420, each of
which are in fluid communication with the nasal tip lumen 419. The exhalation port(s)
420 are covered by a flexible circumferential valve member 422 which works as a one
way valve to allow exhaled air to exit the device into the atmosphere but not allow
ambient air into the device. For example, a rubber band type valve member may be used.
Other equivalent valves will present themselves to the skilled artisan, each of which
are within the scope of the present invention.
[0173] The pure odorant cartridge 430 comprises more than two pure odorant chambers 432
therein. The cartridge 430 is preferably circular in shape with the odorant chambers
432 arranged circumferentially. In the illustrated embodiment, eight chambers 432
are provided. A stem 434 with a lumen 436 therethrough is disposed fixedly generally
centered on the cartridge 430. Stem 434 rises above the top surface T of the cartridge
430, engages the stem opening 414 of the jar lid 412 and is in fixed operational engagement
with the nasal tip 418 and stem lumen 436 is in fluid communication with nasal tip
lumen 419 and glass housing chamber 404. As illustrated, the nasal tip 418 might threaded
for threaded engagement to the stem 434, or be otherwise fixable attached to the stem
434.
[0174] In a preferred embodiment, each chamber 432 holds a single pure odorant or aroma
pellet 436 which is a cylindrical shape matching the shape of the chambers 432 in
the cartridge 430. The pure odorant pellets 436 are preferably composed of absorbent
material such as felt or cotton which will allow air to pass through and expose the
inhaled air flow to a fluid aroma source soaked up by the absorbent material.
[0175] Lid assembly 410 further comprises a gasket 438 held between the bottom surface S
of the cartridge 430 and a retaining disk 440 described further below. The gasket
438 preferably comprises a soft silicone like material which may have a shore hardness
of about 40 with a thickness of about .125 inches, though other materials, hardnesses
and/or thicknesses are within the scope of the invention. The gasket 438 allows the
cartridge 430 to be rotated without opening undesired airways between the pure odorant
chambers 432 and the inhalation air path which will be discussed infra. The gasket
438 have comprise holes for fasteners, e.g., screws, to pass through that hold the
retaining disk and jar lid together such that the cartridge 430 is held snuggly but
allowed to rotate in place. Gasket 438 comprises a flap valve 442 aligned with the
air inlet port 416 and a flap valve 444 aligned with the stem lumen 436, as illustrated,
each of which operate as a one way valve to enable air flow. Other one-way valve solutions
will become apparent to the skilled artisan, each of which are within the scope of
the present invention.
[0176] Lid assembly 410 further comprises a retaining disk 440 as described above that is
attached to the gasket 438 and works to retain the cartridge 430 in such a way as
to allow the cartridge 430 to rotate freely, but not translate vertically. The stem
434 engages and extends through the stem opening 414 such that rotating the stem 434
rotates the cartridge 430 and, therefore, is adapted to enable alignment of any of
the plurality of pure odorant media, e.g., pellets, held in the chambers 432. The
retaining disk 440 comprises an indexing bump 450 or other indexing feature on the
upper surface that fits into the bottom of any one of the chambers 432 to enable alignment
with a particular chamber 432. Retaining disk 440 further comprises a central orifice
or orifices 452 aligned with the flap valve 444 of gasket 438 as well as a circumferential
orifice 454 that is aligned with the flap valve 442 of gasket 438.
[0177] Finally, lid assembly 410 further comprises a dip tube 460 fixed centrally on the
bottom surface B of the retaining disk 440 and comprising a lumen 461 therethrough.
The dip tube 460 may be glued in place and is in fluid communication with the stem
lumen 436 and nasal tip lumen 419 as well as the glass housing chamber 404. Further,
or in the alternative, a nipple 462 may be fixed on the center bottom B of the retaining
disk 440 that holds, or assists in holding, the dip tube 460 in place. The dip tube
460 may be an extruded plastic tube that repels aroma, such as Teflon.
[0178] The interior surfaces of the device may be coated with an aroma repellant material
to help control mechanical latency due to a build-up of aroma molecules on internal
airways. One such molecularly repellant material has been invented at Harvard University.
It is anticipated that super repellant materials might exceed the ability of oleophobic
materials such as Teflon by up to 20 times the capacity of low energy plastics.
[0179] Thus, a cascading of pure odorants may be achieved, without a reset period between
presentations of the different odorants. As shown in Figs 9A and 9B, the cartridge
is preloaded with at least two pure odorants 436. The illustrated cartridge 430 comprises
eight chambers 432 for pure odorants. The desired first pure odorant chamber 432,
with desired first pure odorant 436 therein, is aligned with the inlet port 416 of
the jar lid by rotating the lid assembly 410. The subject then engages the nasal tip
with a nostril and inhales, thereby initiating an inhalation air flow wherein atmospheric
air enters the jar housing at the air inlet port, passing through the air inlet valve,
through the first pure odorant chamber 432, where the inhaled air becomes infused
with pure odorant. The infused air then passes through the flap valve of the gasket
438 and the orifice of the retaining disk 440 and then enters the dip tube 460. The
infused air flows upwardly through the dip tube 460 and through the nasal tip lumen
into the subject's nostril where the infused air is inhaled and cognitive processing
begins. The subject may exhale directly into the nasal tip where, as shown in Fig.
9C, the circumferential valve allows the exhaled air to release into the atmosphere.
The subject then inhales air infused with the first pure odorant again. The process
is repeated until the patient signifies achieving the pure odorant detection threshold.
The cartridge is rotated to the next pure odorant in the test and the inhalation /
exhalation process is repeated until reaching the pure odorant detection threshold.
The metric measuring the reaching of the detection threshold may be measured in number
of breaths and/or in time.
[0180] Turning now to Figures 10A-13B, a pure odorant presentation device 500 is provided
that supports an exchangeable pure odorant cartridge 501 containing at least two pure
odorants for various scent testing purposes. The device 500 consists of an openable
body 502, e.g., hinged and capable of holding the pure odorant cartridge 501, a dual
nostril port 504 comprising an active nasal path and a passive nasal path, capable
of engaging left and right nostrils of a subject at the same time, an optional internal
cartridge rotational system which may be button actuated. Alternatively the cartridge
501 may be manually advanced. An advancement button 508 capable of actuating advancement,
a readout means to display aroma information to testing personnel and an aroma media
disk rotation control button. The active nasal path enables fluid communication between
a first nostril, engaged with the nostril port 504, and a selected and designated
pure odorant while the passive nasal path enables fluid communication between the
second nostril and the atmosphere.
[0181] Figure 10A illustrates one embodiment of the device 500 with active, i.e., pure odorant
infused airflow, left nostril pathing and passive (no odorant infused air) pathing
for the right nostril. Figure 10B illustrates the device 500 of Figure 10A rotated
180 degrees so that the right nostril path is active and the left nostril path is
passive.
[0182] The exchangeable odorant or pure odorant cartridge or aroma media disk 501 consists
of a rigid central body 510 which may be approximately the size of a standard CD Rom
used with computers. The central body 510 has a hub hole 513 that is indexed to cause
one pure odorant chamber 512 containing pure odorant media, e.g., an absorbent pad
or pellet 514, at a time to be aligned with internal airways. The central disk has
at least two chambers 512 designed to support absorbent pads or pellets 514 which
may progressively be aligned with airways. The chambers 512 may be designed with an
offset or air gap 516 to prevent capillary action allowing liquid aroma containing
fluid to leak out of the chamber 512.
[0183] An embodiment of the cartridge 501 is illustrated in Figures 11A-11C and 12A-12F,
including illustration of insertion of a pure odorant media 514 into a chamber 512.
Figure 12 provides a side exploded view of the materials and structure of one embodiment
of the cartridge 501. On either side of the central body 510 are silicone or similar
material disks 520A, 510B, adhesively attached to the central body 510. The first
and second silicone disks 520A, 520B, each have a hub hole 522 in the center matching
the hub hole 513 in the central body 510 and a die cut slot 524 functioning essentially
as a valve that passes over the pure odorant chambers 512 such that the slot 524 passively
covers all the pure odorant media therein. This slot 524 is best seen in Figure 11A.
[0184] Thus, when air is forced against the first flexible silicone disk 520A, air is forced
through the slot 524 and allowed to flow through the aroma infused pure odorant media,
e.g., pad or pellet, to create pure odorant infused air which is forced through the
slot 524 on the second silicone disk and into active airway whereby the aroma infused
air is ducted into the active cannula to be inhaled by the test subject. When air
is not passing through a given chamber 512, the silicone material returns to a passive
sealing position. The silicone disks are permanently attached to the central disk
trapping the absorbent pads in place.
[0185] On the outer surface of both silicone disks is a release strip 530A, 530B which covers
both sides of the cartridge 501, i.e., covering the first and second silicone disks
520A, 520B and the slots 524 therein, such that they must be removed to load the cartridge
501 into the aroma presentation device body.
[0186] Figures 13A-13C provide illustration of the airflows in the device during operation.
Figure 13A illustrates the active nostril pathway, with atmospheric air passing through
a one-way valve 540 to teach the first silicone disk 520A and slot 524 therein. The
air passes into the designated and aligned odorant or pure odorant chamber, with pure
odorant media therein, where the air becomes infused with the odorant or pure odorant
disposed within the aligned chamber. The air flow continues as the odorant or pure
odorant-infused air flows through the slot 524 in the second silicone disk 520B and
upward past one-way valve 542 and through the nasal port 504 into the active first
nostril. Meanwhile, the passive second nostril is in fluid communication with atmosphere
as shown in Fig. 13C. Finally, the active first nostril comprises an exhalation path
as in 13 B where the active first nostril exhales air into the nasal port 504 where
it opens one way valve 542 and exits the device 500 to the atmosphere.
[0187] Figures 14A-14C further illustrate the device of Figs 10A-13C. Thus, cartridge 501
is provided as described previously. In this embodiment, however, the hub hole 513
is non-circular. Specifically, a keyed geometry is employed for hub hole 513 to enable
engagement with, e.g., the advancer mechanisms discussed supra, see, e.g., Figs 6A
(ratcheted gears) and 6B (wound spring or clock spring) for specific examples.
[0188] Turning now to Figures 15A and 15B, a side cutaway view of the cartridge 501 of Figures
13A-13B is illustrated. Thus, the active odorant or pure odorant pathway and the passive
pathway are clearly illustrated. Finally, Figures 16A and 16B provides a side and
front view of the device 500, with advancer button 508 and rotated so that the active
pathway is on the left nostril port 504B. Indication of the active pathway nostril
port is provided on the front of the device as "Left". Turning the device 180 degrees
provides the active pathway on the right nostril port 504A and indication of same
is provided on the then-front of the device (not shown) as "Right". Further, an indexing
indicia is provided with the device 500 to enable tracking of the specific odorant
or pure odorant under current presentation to the patient. The exemplar in Figure
16B indicates "12" which is associated with a specific odorant or pure odorant chamber
in the cartridge 501. A key will be easily provided that matches the indexing indicia
with the odorant or pure odorant currently residing within the chamber that is associated
with indicia "12". Thus, each chamber will comprise a related indexing indicia which
provides annunciation of the chamber under consideration and, therefore, the odorant
or pure odorant, being introduced to the patient.
[0189] Note that the methods, devices and systems disclosed herein have utility for pure
odorants in the measurement of bilateral pure odorant detection thresholds. These
devices also may be used for any odorant, including pure or non-pure odorants. In
other words, odorants that also stimulate the trigeminal nerve (non-pure) may also
be used with the disclosed devices and methods.
[0190] In the case of non-pure odorants, the metric used will comprise an odorant identification
threshold. Thus, the patient will be presented with the odorant-infused air as described
above for pure odorant-infused air, and the next odorant sequentially introduced as
soon as the patient identifies the first odorant by name. This identification point
is defined herein as the odorant detection threshold. Preferably, the odorants' sequential
presentation using the described devices and methods is done without a reset period
between odorant introductions.
Working Example 1
[0191] In an initial study, a single nostril aroma testing device was used. The device was
one liter in capacity and was used with 31 participants. The ages of those tested
ranged from 15 to 84. The participants varied as to educational achievement from high
school dropouts to a medical doctor. Socially the group consisted of a multimillionaire,
a box boy, a high school student, several RNs and a number of retired people.
[0192] The metric of testing was cascading a set of pure odorants in an introduction sequence
and counting breaths between the introduction of a fresh aroma and the participant
recognizing the fresh aroma, i.e., reaching the pure odorant detection threshold.
Alternatively, the time required to reach the pure odorant detection threshold may
have been recorded.
[0193] The pure odorants used were applied in sequence, i.e., cascaded, without a reset
period between successive introductions of the odorants and according to the following
key for the randomly selected right nostril first:
R1: Lemon (Citrus family);
R2: Rose (Floral family);
R3: Spearmint (Herbal family);
R4: Cinnamon (Spice family);
R5: Clove (Spice family); and
R6: Vanilla (Spice family).
[0194] Followed by the left nostril:
L1: Lemon (Citrus family);
L2: Rose (Floral family);
L3: Spearmint (Herbal family);
L4: Cinnamon (Spice family);
L5: Clove (Spice family); and
L6: Vanilla (Spice family).
[0195] The summary data is provided in Table 1.
TABLE 1
| Patient ID |
Right Nostril Total Breaths |
Left Nostril Total Breaths |
| 1 |
27 |
29 |
| 2 |
16 |
13 |
| 3 |
22 |
19 |
| 4 |
27 |
20 |
| 5 |
21 |
22 |
| 6 |
28 |
21 |
| 7 |
17 |
24 |
| 8 |
24 |
22 |
| 9 |
18 |
14 |
| 10 |
18 |
21 |
| 11 |
20 |
18 |
| 12 |
19 |
34 |
| 13 |
16 |
21 |
| 14 |
20 |
19 |
| 15 |
25 |
23 |
| 16 |
35 |
25 |
| 17 |
19 |
29 |
| 18 |
17 |
18 |
| 19 |
18 |
20 |
| 20 |
17 |
14 |
| 21 |
15 |
17 |
| 22 |
18 |
20 |
| 23 |
20 |
20 |
| 24 |
26 |
36 |
| 25 |
14 |
12 |
| 26 |
18 |
18 |
Analysis:
[0196] The average number of breaths across all participants was around 4 breaths per aroma
event. Those with poor lung capacity or shallow breaths tended to require 5 or 6 breaths
as opposed to athletes with greater lung capacity who only required 2 breaths.
[0197] One of the participants (patient 17) was a known victim of Alzheimer's disease as
confirmed by alternative means. As predicted, patient 17 had a significantly lower
aroma sensitivity on the left nostril compare to the right nostril. Three participants
(patients 7, 12 and 13) demonstrated a marked deficiency of the left nostril as compared
to the right without any other likely cause than AD.
[0198] The remaining patients may, using this test method, be ruled out for Alzheimer's
disease.
[0199] Thus, the data show that using the number of breaths required to recognize that the
aroma presented has changed renders useful information formative in assessing the
relative condition bilateral of the olfactory nerve. While overall scent sensitivity
may be impacted, it is thought deterioration due to environmental issues such as chemical
exposure are likely to affect both nostrils similarly. The thing being tested is the
relative sensitivity of the nostrils not the absolute sensitivity. Some people have
a stronger sense of smell than others but one side being significantly weaker only
affected roughly 10% of those tested.
[0200] Using the cascading aroma method the number of breaths or seconds used as a scoring
metric, required to recognize a fresh aroma is being presented are less for a strong
sense of smell and more for a weaker sense of smell. Sometimes the subject would take
more breaths to make sure they really did smell a fresh aroma. Those with particularly
strong sensitivity were more certain the aroma was changed without more breaths.
[0201] Laboratory testing to verify assumptions behind the testing protocol can be done
to satisfy scientific scrutiny. The aroma screen can be validated in a number of ways
related to various metrics and methods of aroma presentation and the indirect and
direct measurement of pure aroma concentration required to illicit a cognitive trigger
that an aroma has been smelled in one nostril. Comparison alternative screening methods
statistically validates a screening method if both consistently render a similar result.
- 1. A gas flow meter may be hooked up to the intake port of the device to confirm that
a relativity equal rate of inhalation is used over the course of a screening.
- 2. The number of seconds and the number of breaths are thought to be statistically
similar, but can easily be recorded together to confirm statistical similarity.
- 3. Counting breaths from the point in time a pure aroma was changed to the next aroma
in a sequence can be validated as consistent with the concentration of pure aroma
seen at the nostril with an electronic nose device in a lab.
[0202] Using the proposed rapid presentation or cascade of a plurality of pure aromas as
a testing perimeter and metric also solves the problem of clearing the aroma testing
device chamber and pure air pathway of a single aroma to return it to a clear air
mode in preparation for the next aroma presentation testing event.
[0203] The sequential aroma cascade method simply does away with the clear air mode entirely
in favor of effectively resetting the olfactory nerve by presenting a fresh aroma.
[0204] Using the plurality of sequentially presented aromas as a testing method actually
simplifies the mechanical device required to present the aromas and manage the testing
events. Not being required to revert to a clear air mode between testing events nullifies
the need for a number of parts in many embodiments of handheld aroma testing devices.
[0205] A removable multi-chambered aroma element could be sold as a consumable test element
allowing for an easy way to refresh the device. After a number of aroma tests have
exhausted the rotating aroma multiple cavity cartridge, it is disposable. The replaceable
cartridge contains a plurality of fresh pure aromas especially formulated at the factory
to work well with the aroma presentation device. Seals covering ports in the multi
cavity aroma chamber are removed and the fresh aroma cartridge is installed.
[0206] Generally speaking, contamination of the pure odorants with any additional additives
or ingredients that might also excite the trigeminal system should be avoided. In
addition, common commercial aroma "essential oil" bases and preservatives might tend
to coat the airways of the aroma chamber and gas pathways with commercial aroma base
oil materials, creating an aroma latency failure mode even where the clear air may
be slightly contaminated with aroma. Thus, pure aroma materials used in the test may
be better diluted with water or trace amounts of alcohol which would evaporate and
not leave a latent odor on the interior surfaces of the testing device. Additionally,
the lowest concentration and amount of aroma that is still detectable by the user
will reduce aroma latency on the air pathways of the device. Certain coatings on the
inner surfaces of the devices disclosed herein may also tend to repel the aroma molecules
instead of presenting a surface to which the aroma molecules adhere. Alternatively,
lining the interior of the aroma presentation device with an electrostatic mat might
capture and hold aroma molecules to maintain a clear air pathway without contamination
of the pure air. Such material can be washed off to recharge the electrostatic resins
use in such products as furnace air filters.
[0207] A computerized application and alternative embodiment of the method may be provided.
Here, the data may be entered by hand into a spreadsheet previously created and saved
within the memory of a programmable computing device, accessory or appliance such
as previously described or may be automatically communicated by, e.g., a USB device
as described herein that is connected to the testing device and in communication,
i.e., wired or wireless, with the computing device. In addition, the computing device
can control the testing device in terms of stopping and starting aroma presentations.
[0208] Moreover, a software database and testing protocol support application(s) may be
used to achieve the testing described herein with any of the disclosed device and
system embodiments of the present invention. The software database may be within individual
computing devices and/or may be housed within a central server that is interconnected
with individual computing devices that are located at testing sites. As illustrated,
at least one central server is provided and in communication with at least one remotely
located computing device. Central server(s) may be cloud-based which may permit controlled
access from any internet connected device, preferably a secure account enabled internet
connection is employed.
[0209] Thus, a programmable computing device for implementing the invention may comprise:
a memory, wherein the application, including programmed instructions for running the
test protocol embodiments described herein is stored and for storing test results;
a processor operatively connected with the memory and which executes the application
and associated programmed instructions; a display that may display the application,
test data results for left and for right nostril trials, trial number, a timer and
the final calculated results in terms of any differential between the left and the
right nostril detection thresholds, or a differential between a previous baseline
or population statistical average score, and the instant test score. The display is
operatively connected with the processor and memory; and a transmitter and a receiver
for operatively connecting, and communicating with, the central server. In this system,
the testing results may be obtained at the testing sites and added, either manually
or automatically as described herein, to the computing device for storage and possible
transmission of the data to the central server.
[0210] When the testing procedure is complete, the test data may be sent, either automatically
or upon prompting by the user, from the computing device at the associated test site
to the remote central server. Central server comprises a memory for storing the received
test data from the at least one computing device and associate test site(s) and for
storing an algorithm for processing and analyzing the instant test site results; a
processor for executing the programmed instructions within the stored algorithm; a
transmitter and a receiver operatively connected with the at least one computing device
whereby two-way communication with the at least one computing device is enabled. Central
server's memory further comprises a database for storing all of the test results received
from the at least one computing device which may be used to develop further refined
and more robust statistical conclusions regarding relevant elements of the patient's
medical history and the instant test data received from the at least one computing
device for an individual patient and securely transmit the calculated disease risk
score based at least in in part upon global data stored within the memory of the central
server and reported to the local computing device. Robust encryption and security
features may be employed to protect individual patient's privacy rights.
[0211] This refinement will thus enable, e.g., a progressively more robust test result that
may allow detection of a significant differential or change in the test data for an
individual patient. For example, early onset of Alzheimer's disease may be detected
progressively earlier as the database becomes more populated to eventually become
a vast library of relevant medical history and patient test data and, as a result,
becomes more robust. Thus, certain embodiments of the database of the central server
may allow analysis of the data within the database for generation of the smallest
possible differential in the olfactory threshold values, left vs right, that is still
clinically significant. This is the point at which the device, systems and methods
of the present invention will allow earliest possible detection of asymmetry and,
in turn, earliest possible detection of Alzheimer's disease.
[0212] Similarly, in the case of symmetrical olfactory dysfunction, the database of the
central server may be analyzed to determine the smallest change, from either baseline
or from a prior test point or from a population statistical average, that may be considered
clinically significant. This represents the finest analysis and diagnosis possible
for symmetric olfactory dysfunction and the ability to monitor the underlying condition
or disease progression and/or the efficacy of the treatment regimen.
[0213] The algorithm of the central server may analyze the data received from the at least
one computing device and, when analysis is complete, the central server may transmit
an electronically secure summary of the testing results as a risk score as described
above back to the computing device at the test site so that the user, i.e., a health
care provider, can observe the results by, for example, a secure email sent to a predetermined
email address.
[0214] In addition, a separate application or, alternatively, an internet browser supported
client program may supply a checklist of a patient's pre-testing history and enable
establishing of the patient's clinically acceptable baseline of nasal performance,
including any relevant medical history factors such as structural or medical issues
that may compromise the left or the right nostril/airway performance and/or efficiency.
This baseline value may be incorporated into the above algorithm to provide a corrective
factor that essentially treats any observed airway performance for the left and/or
right nostril and associated airway as a variable that may skew the final results
if not corrected. The database described above may also accept input of this data
and incorporate it into the analysis phase to enable a corrected result to be calculated
and typically securely communicated to the appropriate computing device and associated
test site.
[0215] As described above, certain embodiments of the disclosed devices of the present invention
comprise measurement of the concentration of the odorant, or pure odorant, presented
to the patient's nostrils that are required to evoke a response by the patient, i.e.,
an indication that the pure odorant detection threshold was reached.
[0216] Still further embodiments may capture the number of breaths a patient requires to
inhale through the various devices and methods of the present invention to reach the
olfactory threshold for each nostril. The breath data may be captured and analyzed
for example, by the computing device application and/or at the central server(s) as
described above.
[0217] A combination of data types may be obtained using the devices and methods of the
present invention, e.g., capturing the elapsed time between introducing aroma to the
aroma airway passage and the detection thereof by the patient, the number of breaths
required to detect the introduced aroma and/or the absolute concentration of odorant,
or pure odorant, required to reach the olfactory threshold for each nostril. The data
may be analyzed by the local computing device's application and/or analyzed remotely
at the central server(s) as described above in order to determine the patient's odorant,
or pure odorant, detection threshold.
[0218] In certain embodiments, the testing protocol may be accomplished using the various
devices and systems of the present invention described above by slowly increasing
the concentration of aroma until the trigger point of cognitive notice is reached.
This may be done by measuring the time it takes to recognize an increasing aroma level.
Similarly, the number of inhalations required during a testing event required to detect
the aroma may be significant, simple and useful measurable standard.
[0219] In an alternative embodiment, an absolute aroma concentration testing method, a real
time digital "electronic nose" measurement of the actual parts per million of pure
aroma per a known volume of breathable gas may be used. The aroma concentration is
slowly increased to reach the required minimum saturation level required to trigger
the pure aroma detection threshold. That digital value becomes a data point for the
nostril being tested. A test event result might be based upon an average of, e.g.,
0.000340 ppm on the left side and 0.000580 ppm on the right side. The ppm score can
be converted to a L/R ratio such as, 0.000340/0.000580 or some other mathematical
notation suitable for statistical analysis and reporting the data in a useful form
to a health care provider.
[0220] Certain laboratory testing equipment is able to accurately identify and quantify
a very specific aroma or exact sets of specific aromas in real time and displayed
concentrations digitally in parts per million. These electronic smelling devices are
well known to the skilled artisan. Electronic nose modules are thus very sensitive,
but only detect a very narrow range of organic or chemical odor that they are "fingerprinted"
to detect.
[0221] Using electronic nose modules in a bilateral clinical aroma detection threshold testing
device is disclosed. As the concentration of a pure aroma in a breathable gas is slowly
increased, a real-time digital readout slowly rises numerically, until the subject
notes in cognitive recognition that an aroma is detected. The numerical readout may
be automatically fixed or frozen at the level required for cognitive notice that an
aroma has been detected when the test administrator removes their finger from the
aroma control button.
[0222] The clinical testing personnel notes the ppm displayed which was required to elicit
the reaction and also notes which nostril was being tested by that particular testing
event. Data record keeping may be accomplished, as described herein, by a computer
attached by USB or wire or radio system such as Bluetooth or Wi-Fi, to the testing
device or testing results may be scored and calculated on paper.
[0223] Taking a clinically accepted baseline of individual nasal air flow performance into
account, reduces test error and enhances the overall efficacy of the disclosed aroma
test. If a person has a severely reduced airflow in one nostril, without taking that
issue into account, test results might be skewed. Below are at least some of the ways
to validate a clinically suitable "baseline of nasal performance".
[0224] Relative airflow measurement of the nostrils overcomes most inhalation air volume
impediment variables or at least make the testing personnel visually and/or graphically
aware of the issue in a quantitative way. Direct airflow testing with dual gas flown
meters, visually comparing the actual inhalation volume of the two nostrils at the
same time, is certainly the most important consideration for establishing a nasal
performance baseline. A bilateral inhalation airflow testing device as previously
disclosed has two airflow readout elements displayed side by side to visually compare
the nasal inhalation performance of the two nostrils, wherein the testing and comparing
is accomplished at the same time for the two nostrils.
[0225] The subject may be shown the readout in a mirror and is asked to inhale gently such
that the top ball is near a mark on the readout. The ball that is constantly lower
indicates that the indicated nostril has a lower airflow volume. A bleed valve might
be provided to "set" the upper limits and calibrate the readout at the factory. An
airflow inhalation testing device is built into some embodiments of the testing apparatus.
Flow meters with a sufficient gas flow rate encompassing maximum nostril performance
may also be used.
[0226] In addition to actually testing the relative airflow of the nostrils, the following
items need to be considered in establishing a clinically acceptable baseline of nasal
performance and the appropriateness of testing a particular patient with the disclosed
devices, systems and methods.
[0227] A medical history of the patient may be obtained in regard to injury to the nose,
the individual nostrils and associated airways and inhalation performance thereof,
known or observed structural abnormalities, significant nose bleeds, a history of
sinus infections, known strokes or T.I.A.s, current nasal congestion, a diagnosis
of deviated septum, any previous nasal surgery, nasal tumors, polyups, allergies,
a history of exposure to strong industrial odors, age, etc., to enhance the clinical
significance of the results of the present invention and, potentially, to disqualify
certain individuals from taking the test.
[0228] An illuminated optical examination of the nasal passage may be executed to identify
mucous plugs, serious inflammation or other structural or medical impediments to a
freely flowing nasal airway.
[0229] Administering a decongestant or other medicine to open airways may also be indicated
in certain patient prior to nasal airflow measurements and aroma testing.
[0230] Retesting the subject at a later time of the same day or at later date may also mitigate
temporary nasal conditions that might otherwise skew the test results.
[0231] A sliding scale, or corrective factor as described above, to mathematically adjust,
or "handicap" the bilateral smelling acuity scores for a non-symmetrical baseline
of nasal air flow may be applied to the aroma scale test results.
[0232] Cutoff levels will be established which will disqualify certain people from being
considered a good candidate for the disclosed pure aroma detection test.
[0233] The disclosed aroma testing devices may be "tuned" in a number of ways during the
industrial design process towards creating ideal efficacy as will be understood by
the skilled artisan. For example, the diameter of the air intake ports, the diameter
of gas supply tubes, the diameter of ports into and out of the aroma chamber, the
size and diameter of the clear air chamber, the diameter of cannula tubes and disposable
nasal cannula parts can be enlarged or constricted to achieve effective control of
aroma concentration. Thus, time intervals or breaths may be adjusted as required to
reach a threshold condition through scaling the apparatus. Electronic ultrasonic aroma
emitters may also be adjusted to create a weaker or stronger aroma concentration.
[0234] The concentration of aroma may also be controlled by using various pure aroma producing
materials and by controlling aroma dilution and the amount used. The surface area
of the aroma chamber and surface area of the aroma source exposed to passing air are
also controllable design variables. A minimum amount of aroma detectable is preferred,
to reduce possible latency of aroma in what is intended to be substantially clear
air. Coatings, filters and aroma absorbing elements may be applied to various embodiment
to repel and/or absorb aroma molecules, thereby reducing latent aroma in what is intended
to be substantially clear air.
[0235] Aroma sources as described herein may be in the form of a liquid held in an absorbent
porous material such as a wick, stiff blotter slide or a cotton ball that is placed
in the aroma chamber of the test apparatus. A viscous material such as peanut butter
could be wiped onto a slide like element and inserted into the aroma chamber or the
material supplied in a disposable portion package with removable seal top. Odorants,
or pure odorants, may be used as discussed herein.
[0236] Such aroma/odorant diffusion devices are suitable to use as a cartridge that is inserted
into the housing of the various devices as described herein. Such devices are refillable
and may be filled with any essential oil. USB type ultrasonic devices emit little
aroma when switched off. They may be used in the test devices of the present invention
comprising, e.g., a single air chamber, thus reducing the complexity and parts required
to manufacture such devices.
[0237] Repeating the testing protocol discussed herein a number of times, no matter which
embodiment is used, with a randomized rotation between the nostrils and fully purging
unscented airways between testing events, will create a meaningful and repeatably
accurate and clinically acceptable test result.
[0238] As discussed above, the results from the use of the various embodiments of the devices,
systems and methods of the present invention may be used to identify an asymmetry
in a patient's olfactory threshold determined for the left and right airways. In the
case of pure odorants used in the testing protocol, e.g., if an olfactory deficiency
is detected via a higher olfactory threshold in the patient's left nostril and associated
airway, this may provide early indication of Alzheimer's disease.
[0239] Alternatively, the results from the use of the various embodiments of the devices,
systems and methods of the present invention may be used to identify an olfactory
dysfunction, as compared with a baseline value, that is generally symmetrical as determined
by the patient's olfactory threshold in the left and right airways. Once this type
of dysfunction is determined, the patient's olfactory threshold may be monitored for
several purposes including, but not limited to, monitoring the progress of the disease
and/or condition contributing at least in part to the symmetrical olfactory dysfunction
and/or monitoring the efficacy of a treatment regimen developed to treat the underlying
disease, condition and/or olfactory dysfunction.
[0240] Actually diagnosing AD certainly rests with Doctors. Presenting the results of a
comprehensive medical history analysis and also factoring in any specific AD screening
results available, with appropriated weight being given each element of medical information,
might be produced uniformly by a computerized data base system. The server would run
an algorithm designed to weigh relevant data according to their efficaciousness and
specificity for AD and render an AD stage assessment for local Doctors.
[0241] The disclosed algorithm concept, consists basically, of a complex database software
program, factors all known risk factors and screening results, would be utilized to
issue an AD risk factor. A universal risk factor scoring method would thus assist
Doctors in making a clinical diagnosis more easily and much earlier in the progression
of the disease. The algorithm would be continually adjusted to increase accuracy as
more relevant data becomes available.
[0242] It is important for the purposes of doing clinical drug trials that groups of patients
with early AD and those persons with little AD risk be identified. A large data base
that contains medical histories and AD screening test results of many patients would
allow computer data based observational studies to be done.
[0243] Designing and running a computerized database report, predicated upon certain aspects
of the data, suspected AD risk factors could be quickly confirmed or found to be statistically
irrelevant. Assume the data base has a yes or no answer to the question, "do you snore?"
A researcher wants to know if breathing difficulties defined by snoring during sleep
might be a risk factor for AD. Run the data and find out, in mere seconds
[0244] Medical History and Screening Information items to be considered in a comprehensive
AD Risk Factor Scoring System. This system would separate patient into low, medium,
high and very high risk for AD categories.
[0245] The items in an AD medical history inventory are subject to change as new risk factors
are suspected and previously identified potential risk factors are ruled out. Thus,
the questions asked in the medical history form and the weight given each element
are a dynamic that must be continuously adjusted as more data becomes available.
[0246] All AD screening tests included may be given weight based upon specific efficacy,
(the occurrence of false positives and false negatives).
[0247] While a patient might have a strong risk factor based upon their medical history,
an 80 year old with no amyloid plaque deposits on their retina and no deterioration
of the olfactory nerve have virtually no risk of developing AD before they are statistically
dead due to the period it takes for AD to fully develop.
[0248] Re-screening is still recommended however, in case AD indications arise later on.
Also, such a person by eliminating AD, but who has still has some dementia is helped.
Their condition must be due to some other medical reason and the Doctor needs to know
that.
[0249] Ruling out AD is just as important as diagnosing it. The relief it would give people
to know that they are at a very low risk for ever developing AD means a lapse in memory
wouldn't cause panic, fearing that their minds are slipping away. People who have
seen family members deteriorate are certainly emotionally charged regarding that risk
in their own case.
[0250] A standardized AD Risk Factor System which takes all efficacious screening tests
and medical history items into account to render a risk score would tend to create
a more universal medical characterization of AD patient condition, furthering the
medical art. A doctor who knows a certain patient has a high risk factor might order
a Cur Cumin Study to rule out AD.
[0251] The proposed Risk Factor material below is far from a finished product as each risk
factor is based on recent data a subject to constant revision.
[0252] Sample Medical History and AD Risk Factor questions, an example:
- 1. Age AD Development Risk Doubles every 5 years after 80
80=0, 85=+10 90=+20 95=+25 100=+5
- 2. Sex, Female 50% greater risk than men
M=0 F=+50
- 3. Do you smoke? How many packs a day? 59% risk factor
1=+20 2=+30 3=+40
- 4. Blood Pressure numbers for Pulse Pressure, over 60 risk factor
PP60=+25 PP65=+30 PP70=+40
- 5. Total Cholesterol,
180=+20 190=+30 200=+40 210=+50 220=+60 225=65
- 6. Weight m Midlife Obesity 60% risk factor
BMI at 40 greater than 100=+50
- 7. Height, Calculate current BMI
- 8. Family History of AD,
No=0 Yes=+30
- 9. Do you Snore?
No=0 Yes=+20
- 10. Been Diagnosed with Sleep apnea?
No= 0 Yes=30 Use a CPAP? Yes-10 No=0
- 11. Education years, Highest Grade level Achieved
6=+50 7=+40 8=+30 9=+20 10=+10 11=0 12=-10 13=-20 14=-30 14=-50
- 12. How old was your mother when you were born?
30=0 35=+20 40+=+40
- 13. Do you have migraine headaches?
No=0 Yes=+40
- 14. Been exposed to fumigants at work, as professional pest control?
No=0 Yes=+50
- 15. Have you been exposed to defoliants?
No=0 Yes=+50
- 16. Ever been hospitalized for head trauma, such as a concussion?
No=0 Yes=+40
- 17. Are you diabetic? Type I or Type II? 46%
No=0 Yes=+50
- 18. Ever had a stroke?
No=0 Yes=+50
- 19. Have you been diagnosed with heart disease?
No=0 Yes=+50
- 20. Have you suffered from serious depression requiring medication? 65%
No=0 Yes=+50
- 21. Have you had your DNA decoded? AD Risk Gene noted
No=0 Yes=+100
- 22. Do you take low dose aspirin every day?
No=+50 Yes=0
- 23. Do you take Blood thinners?
No=+30 Yes=0
- 24. Women, do you take Estrogen hormone replacement
No=0 Yes=+50
- 25. Are you Physically inactivity 82%
No=0 Yes=+40
- 26. Midlife Hypertension 61%
No=0 Yes=+40
- 27. Hearing loss documented
No=0 Yes= +20
- 28. Low Cognitive Test Score
No=0 Yes=+200
A risk factor score of 250+ Low Risk Factor
A risk factor score of 500+ is stage 2 Moderate Risk Factor
A risk factor score of 750+ is stage 3, High Risk Factor
A risk factor score of 1000+ Very High Risk Factor
Basic AD Staging Perimeters
[0253] Stage 0 in Alzheimer's Disease are those characterized as having no positive AD screen
results noted. A person who has no positive screens results, despite multiple and
significant risk factors may be AD free for the rest of their natural life span. For
example, a person age 75 who has no amyloid plaque visualized on their retina whatsoever
and has equal aroma detection ability between their nostrils is unlikely to ever develop
AD or it will be so minor and so late in life that most such people would die of other
causes long before serious dementia takes place. Re-screening Stage 0 patients at
least every 5 years might be recommended, especially when helpful medications are
finally approved.
Stage 1 in Alzheimer's Disease is characterized as the incipient stage, where dementia
is not noticeable and plaque deposits on the retina are present but very limited.
The aroma scale screen might show a slightly loss of aroma detection on the left side,
blood tests might show a very limited amount of AD associated lipids. The lowest level
of detectable characteristics of AD onset by any set of dependable screening methods
broadly define Stage 1.
Stage 2 in Alzheimer's Disease is characterized as the AD development stage when significant
plaque is deposited in brain and retinal tissue. The aroma scale would show a marked
loss of pure aroma detection on the left side and a serious cognitive decline will
be noticed by the patient and family. Low levels of AD related lipids would be noted
in AD screening blood tests, PET scans would show plaque at detectable levels on the
brain.
Stage 3 in Alzheimer's Disease is characterized by profound memory loss issues, very
notable plaque deposits in brain and retinal tissue, significant loss of pure aroma
detection on the left side would be noted and higher levels of AD related lipids would
be noted in AD blood tests.
Stage 4 in Alzheimer's Disease is characterized by severely impacted memory issues,
very significant plaque deposits on the brains and retinal tissue, A profound loss
of pure aroma detection ability in the left side and a recent decline in aroma detection
on the right side, as well. Stage 4 is the terminal stage of Alzheimer's disease.
Managing global testing data
[0254] No medical testing apparatus or method has diagnostic value without a convincing
amount of data to document efficacy. The combination of the disclosed handheld aroma
testing mechanism and aroma testing protocol with associated data, can be well managed
to have dramatic potential for many purposes.
[0255] From the medical provider's point of view, there is an internet based web site containing
the most recent information on the aroma scale test, provider account registration
and the practice's data for its patients behind a secure login infrastructure.
[0256] The medical provider establishes an account for their practice that includes providing
a physical clinic shipping address, phone numbers, credit card account information,
a designated email account and other contact information.
[0257] A password protected
"provider account" is thus set up to support the online purchase of Aroma Scale devices, consumable
Aroma Cartridges, nostril airflow testing meters, etc. A unique Medical Provider Account
identifier code is provided which is used in establishing secure patient file access.
Provider accounts include an automatic payment system utilizing a credit card for
paying for aroma scale reporting services and products.
[0258] A computer application that runs on iPad, iPhone, Android, Macs and PCs allows secure
patient data files to be established and the data accessed by the medical provider.
[0259] Secure Patient files contain relevant medical history, nostril airflow data and dated
aroma scale test data for any patient given the aroma score screening test. This account
information is "HEPPA secure" and may require the use of unique patient identifier
codes that only the doctor can correlate with any particular patient. Follow up aroma
testing is added to the existing patient file along with date and relevant medical
history information.
[0260] The computer application may be in the form of a stand alone "App" that is distributed
free, by Apple Computer Company and various Android App Stores. Alternatively, a web
based HTML5 App would be available offering similar functions running on common web
browsers.
[0261] To begin using the Aroma Scale screening system a provider would set up a provider
account, order aroma scale testing apparatus and train nurses who will administer
the test in their clinics. Training may be done by using a DVD or viewing videos posted
on line.
[0262] A database populated with numerous patient files would allow for "virtual" observational
clinical studies. Further medical history information may be added periodically to
updated data input forms, as helpful risk factors are proposed. Requests for database
analysis reports would be fulfilled by the central computer database under the control
of the Aroma Score Company.
[0263] An extensive database would provide candidates for drug studies since known early
onset AD and similarly situated people who are not early onset AD would be searchable
by locality. The demand for highly concentrated early onset AD patients who are local
and willing to participate in clinical trials is a major obstacle for the drug industry,
worldwide in doing clinical trials.
Screening a patient includes the protocol elements of:
[0264]
- 1. Opening a new online data entry form using an application or web form. The data
entry form requires every block of data requested be entered before going to the following
page to insure complete files.
- 2. A medical history page includes, the provider account identifier code, the system
automatically loads the date of the test, requires an entry that encrypts a novel
patient identifier code, records date of birth, sex, weight etc., including relevant
known medical history, nostril airflow numbers and the Aroma Scale raw data.
- 3. Upon completing the patient data entry form the nurse enters "Submit" to send the
new patient file over the internet to the Aroma Score central server. This completes
the test and data entry portion of the Aroma Score management method.
- 4. Upon receiving the patient data file over an internet connection, the central server
adds the disclosed information to a central data base and correlates the instant data
provided with all existing data on the server.
- 5. The server then uses a proprietary algorithm to generate an AD risk score for that
particular patient considering all the medical history and testing data amassed globally.
- 6. The server then charges the medical provider's credit card a processing fee for
providing an AD risk score. Follow-up Aroma Scoring processing might be free for registered
patients to encourage participation with the program long term.
- 7. The server then sends the medical provider an email that include the encrypted
patient identification code, the report lists known risk factors for AD and an Aroma
Scale Risk Assessment.
- 8. The medical provider then uses the Aroma Scale Risk Assessment to assist in making
a diagnosis or decision to do more AD risk testing. The diagnosis could include, planning
a follow up aroma scale screen in the future, doing alternative testing to confirm
or exclude incipient AD in case of a high risk assessment. The risk assessment may
completely clear the patient, for the time being.
Aroma Scale Risk Assessment Reports might be similar to these examples:
[0265]
[email protected]
Re; AromaScore Results for patient 6562GS78
Dr. Heil:
Your office submitted AromaScale AD screening history and test data for patient 6562GS78
on June 5, 2014. Due to the following risk factors, we assign the highest risk factor
to this patient. Further diagnostic testing is recommended with a follow up AromaScale
screening in 6 months.
Patent Code: 6562GS78
Risk Factors for AD
[0266]
- 1. Sex, Patient is female, 50% greater chance of developing AD
- 2. Age, patient is 83, risk doubles for AD every 5 years after age 80
- 3. Mild Dementia Noted, due to age and limited extent of dementia noted this may not be relevant, yet
- 4. Sleep Apnea, Patient reports sleep study indicating sleep apnea, moderate enhanced risk
- 5. Pulse Pressure High, 165/87, Pulse pressure well over 60 points, High Risk factor
- 6. Family History of AD, slight added risk factor due to one parent having AD at an age prior to 90
- 7. AromaScale Screen Results, 47 Left/ 33 Right, no significant bilateral air flow factor.
[0267] VERY HIGH RISK for early onset AD is predicted.
[0268] NOTE: Doctor Heil,
Due to the above noted high risk factors, further diagnostic testing is clearly recommended
for this patient.
[0269] Patient should be advised to prepare for a notable decline in her cognitive condition
over the next few year. Preparation might include obtaining long term health care
insurance if she is not already covered. Any care givers need to be advised that her
dementia symptoms may increase in the short term.
[0270] Follow up AromaScale testing is free, please participate in our clinical trial by
helping us follow this patient's condition. Patient may be asked if they would be
interested in being part of a clinical study testing new AD medicines. Such medicines
might help them avoid further dementia.
[0271] Thank you, the AromaScale Team
Cur Cumin Stained Amyloid Plaque AD Screen/Confirmation
[0272] Another early onset AD screening method of great interest to the medical industry
has been staining amyloid plaque and then visually identifying the plaque in the eye
of a living person through the iris.
[0273] One particularly helpful "smart tag" is the bright yellow Indian spice Cur Cumin.
Being hydrophobic, ingested or injected cur cumin molecules jump the blood brain barrier
to attach to a molecularly sticky spot on Amyloid plaque deposits. Since some eye
tissue, (notably the retina), is neural tissue much like the brain, deposits of plaque
develop there concurrently with the brain and fortunately can be visualized without
invasive procedures.
While cur cumin stained plaques may be visualized with white light, UV light at around
400nm tends to create a fluorescence effect with an orange glow that contrasts nicely
with unstained retinal tissue tending to be another color of yellow. The plaque can
be viewed through the iris with or without dilating the eye. Common Ophthalmology
examination tools for visualizing the retina may be used. The gold standard of retinal
examination is the dilated view of the retina.
[0274] Administering natural Cur Cumin and then examining the eye and not finding any amyloid
plaque amounts to a quite persuasive negative screen result for incident AD. No plaque,
no AD. Alternative causes for plaque on the retina or other features that might be
notable may be discounted through prior examination of the eye by a qualified ophthalmologist.
A baseline and cur cumin stained retinal image can tell a trained Ophthalmologist
a lot.
[0275] Fundus photography is used to document abnormalities of the eye or disease progression
and may be used for conditions such as macular degeneration, glaucoma, neoplasms of
the retina and choroid (benign and malignant), retinal hemorrhages, ischemia, retinal
detachment, choroid disturbances, and diabetic retinopathy. It may also be used for
assessment of recently performed retinal laser surgery.
[0276] While research has been done using chemical derivatives of Cur Cumin to supposedly
enhance the effect, shift the wavelength of light that excites or is fluoresced by
certain wavelengths of light, natural cur cumin works well at around 400nm without
chemical enhancement of the spice. Light that simply contains the 400nm light with
other wavelengths as well still shows the plaque to the trained eye of a doctor of
Ophthalmology.
[0277] Cur Cumin has been allowed legally in the United States as a food supplement and
as a spice, used without serious contra-indications for many years. The effect of
natural cur cumin seen on retinal tissue is well known.
[0278] What is lacking in using cur cumin as a screening method for finding Amyloid Plaque
as a screen for early onset AD is a scoring method that quantifies the plaque deposits.
Digital images of the retina may be sent via the internet and stored on servers for
later examination by a qualified Doctor of Ophthalmology. A set of retinal images
taken over time show a progression of the AD disease process as additional plaque
is deposited.
[0279] Data show that while cur cumin taken orally stains amyloid plaque deposits on the
retina, those patients without plaque deposits show no difference between a baseline
retinal photograph and a series of photographs taken daily with a 800 mg dose of the
staining agent cur cumin.
[0280] Some research indicates that cur cumin in the blood stream reaches a maximum in an
hour after ingestion if it has an oil additive or a pepper extract added to aid in
absorption by the body. The cur cumin in the blood steam jumps to the plaque and adheres
to it creating the visual effect needed to identify retinal plaques.
[0281] Cur Cumin Stained Retinal Amyloid Plaque Detection and Scoring Method Amyloid plaque
in the eye has been detected when such plaque is stained by an appropriate agent.
The staining agent is applied topically to the exterior of the eye with some screens
and are taken orally or injected into the blood screen to stain any plaque on the
eye. Plaque may thus be seen both on the cornea and the retina. Of the methods above
used to administer cur cumin, ingestion is the least troublesome to the patient and
provides sufficient effect on retinal plaque to work well as a screening system.
[0282] Recently, methods of visualizing and identifying amyloid plaque in living patients
have been demonstrated. Various cur cumin deviates and alternative stains such as
Congo Red, special optical detection devices and methods of detection have been proposed.
[0283] However, a meaningful scoring method has yet to be introduced to the medical community
to quantify such deposits seen in the eye. Evidence that cur cumin stained retinal
plaque has in fact been detected in a patient's eye really doesn't facilitate a meaningful
diagnosis, particularly as to staging without a universal method of comparison.
[0284] A retinal plaque stained screen method using orally administered naturally occurring
cur cumin is particularly efficacious with certain steps taken to prevent false positives
due to alternative reasons such plaque might be present.
Cur Cumin Retinal Study Protocol
[0285] A patient suspected of having early onset AD due to an aroma screen is referred by
their general practitioner or neurologist to a local ophthalmologist. The local ophthalmologist
observes the eye grounds and takes a detailed digital picture of the retina. The patient
is then given cur cumin in tablet form to ingest and given a second appointment.
[0286] The follow-up appointment is to have their eye(s) re-examined after a period required
for their body to absorb the cur cumin and have the cur cumin jump the blood brain
barrier to attach to a receptive area on any retinal plaque that might be present
in the eye.
[0287] At the second local Ophthalmologist appointment, the eyes are examined again and
a second retinal digital photograph is taken using light and or filters including
wave lengths around 400 nm (+ or - 20 nm) At those wave length, natural cur cumin
which has bonded to any retinal plaque has a fluorescence in a bright orange color
that contrasts with unstained retinal tissue. The plaque is thus easily noticeable
if present. A lack of plaque deposits is also visually apparent in detailed digital
retinal digital photographs
[0288] While strong UV light around 265 nm is harmful to eye tissue, light in the range
that fluoresces cur cumin is not dangerous, especially at fairly low levels and for
short periods of time.
[0289] The local ophthalmologist does not confirm or deny that plaque was visualized and
then emails the first and second retinal photographs to a central server where a board
certified ophthalmologist remotely reads the digital pictures to stage the plaque
based upon a zero for no plaque to a higher scale number based upon the relative amount
of plaque seen.
[0290] No plaque whatsoever seen means that AD is not in early stages and amounts to a negative
screening result. Clearly, amyloid plaque, when detected is significant. Having also
seen a baseline retinal photograph of the eye's condition before the cur cumin stain
and considering the medical history of the patient allows the doctor to rule out alternative
reasons such plaque is seen that are due to alternative conditions than AD.
[0291] The diagnosis of retinal plaque and its relative concentration is reported back to
the local general practitioner or neurologist who may inform the patient, order other
confirming screens or advise the patient that there is no indication of AD development
at this time.
[0292] Staging AD from the retinal image is:
Stage O, a negative result of the study, the patient is not developing AD.
Stage 1, the minimum amount of plaque detectable, this person is likely early onset
for AD.
Stage 2, Plaque is clearly notable and in greater amounts than stage 1.
Stage 3, The plaque is very notable and in greater concentration than stage 3
Stage 4, the most plaque seen in such studies, this person is profoundly diseased
and likely in the terminal stage 4 of AD.
[0293] The local Doctor is then advised by email sent only to a designated email address
for their practice by the central screening system, as to the relative amount of retinal
plaque seen and a comprehensive AD risk score.
[0294] The cur cumin testing protocol may be used as an additional AD screening tool following
a positive screen using the above methods, devices and systems. Alternatively, the
cur cumin testing protocol may be used as a confirmatory AD test, following a positive
screen using the above methods, devices and systems.
[0295] The present invention should not be considered limited to the particular examples
described above, but rather should be understood to cover all aspects of the invention.
Various modifications, equivalent processes, as well as numerous structures to which
the present invention may be applicable will be readily apparent to those of skill
in the art to which the present invention is directed upon review of the present specification.
Embodiments:
[0296]
Embodiment 1: A method for cascading pure odorants to the nostrils of a patient, comprising:
providing at least two pure odorants;
establishing an introduction order for the at least two pure odorants;
introducing the at least two pure odorants in pure odorant-infused air in the established
introduction order to the patient's first nostril without a reset period between successively
introduced pure odorant-infused air, wherein when the patient indicates reaching the
pure odorant detection threshold for an introduced pure odorant, the successive pure
odorant in the introduction order is introduced; and
introducing the at least two pure odorants in pure odorant-infused air in the established
introduction order to the patient's second nostril without a reset period between
successively introduced pure odorant-infused air, wherein when the patient indicates
reaching the pure odorant detection threshold for an introduced pure odorant, the
successive pure odorant in the introduction order is introduced.
Embodiment 2: The method of embodiment 1, wherein the recorded metric comprises the sum of the
total time times and/or the sum of the total number of breaths required by the patient
to reach the pure odorant detection threshold.
Embodiment 3: The method of embodiment 2, providing a device to introduce the at least two pure
odorants in pure odorant infused-air to each of the patient's nostrils in the established
introduction order.
Embodiment 4: A device for cascading odorants or pure odorants, comprising:
a housing defining a chamber therein in valved communication with external atmospheric
air;
a nasal tip with a lumen therethrough, the lumen in fluid communication with the housing
chamber;
an odorant or pure odorant cartridge rotatably disposed in the housing and having
more than two odorant or pure odorant chambers therein; and
an odorant or pure odorant disposed within each one of the more than two odorant or
pure odorant chambers, wherein the odorant or pure odorant chambers are successively
rotatably aligned to enable a selected odorant or pure odorant chamber, with odorant
or pure odorant disposed therein, to move into fluid communication with the housing
chamber and the nasal tip lumen.
Embodiment 5: A handheld odorant or pure odorant presentation device consisting of a hollow body
including;
an opening to the atmosphere in fluid communication with a first odorant or pure odorant
chamber holding a first odorant or pure odorant, the first odorant or pure odorant
chamber having a second opening that is in selective alignment with a single airway
passage into the hollow body;
a one-way valve supported by the hollow body and dividing the hollow body into a larger
and a smaller cavity;
an upper cavity operationally connected with the hollow body and enclosed by a top
element, the top element comprising a surface extending to the outer surface of the
device which has a one-way valve directing airflow back into the atmosphere, wherein
the top structural element comprises a nasal specula holding part.
Embodiment 6: The odorant or pure odorant presentation device of embodiment 5, further comprising
a selectable plurality of odorant or pure odorant chambers that may be sequentially
moved in line with an air pathway into the nostril of a test subject.
Embodiment 7: The pure odorant presentation device of embodiment 5, wherein the plurality of aroma
chambers is a single, removable, potential disposable part.
Embodiment 8: The pure odorant presentation device of embodiment 5, wherein the plurality of odorant
or pure odorant chambers rotate in relation to the hollow body to sequentially align
one airway of the odorant or pure odorant chamber with the hollow body airway which
is in direct fluid communication with a person's nostril.
Embodiment 9: The pure odorant presentation device of embodiment 5, further comprising means for
emitting an audible tone, during patient exhalation through the device to help the
testing personnel note the number of breaths taken upon exhalation of an aroma. Embodiment 10: The odorant or pure odorant presentation device of embodiment 5, further comprising
oleophobic airway parts.
Embodiment 11: The pure odorant presentation device of embodiment 10, further comprising means a
hollow body formed of an oleophobic material.
Embodiment 12: A cartridge for holding odorant or pure odorant media, comprising:
a substantially circular rigid central body and having two sides;
more than two odorant or pure odorant chambers defined by the rigid central body,
each chamber capable of holding an effective amount of one odorant or pure odorant;
a hub hole generally located in the center of the substantially circular rigid central
body.
Embodiment 13: The cartridge of embodiment 12, further comprising:
the more than two odorant or pure odorant chambers arranged sequentially near an outer
edge of the substantially circular rigid central body.
Embodiment 14: The cartridge of embodiment 12, further comprising:
more than two indexing indicia disposed on the rigid central body, each indicia associated
with one of the odorant or pure odorant chambers and capable of providing an annunciation
of the odorant or pure odorant chamber the indicia is associated with.
Embodiment 15: The cartridge of embodiment 14, wherein the annunciation is visual.
Embodiment 16: The cartridge of embodiment 12, wherein each of the two sides of the substantially
circular rigid central body is covered by a substantially circular disk, each disk
having a central hub hole and a slot aligned with the position of the more than two
odorant or pure odorant chambers, the slots allowing air to pass through, thereby
enabling air to pass through the odorant or pure odorant chamber.